International medical migration: a critical conceptual review of the global movements of doctors and nurses

Health (London). 2014 Nov;18(6):580-96. doi: 10.1177/1363459314524803. Epub 2014 Mar 27.

Abstract

This paper critically appraises the discourse around international medical migration at the turn of the 21st century. A critical narrative review of a range of English-language sources, including grey literature, books and research reports, traces the development and spread of specific causative models. The attribution of causative relations between the movement of skilled medical workers, the provision of health care and population health outcomes illustrates how the global reach of biomedicine has to be understood in the context of local conditions. The need to understand migration as an aspect of uneven global development, rather than a delimited issue of manpower services management, is illustrated with reference to debates about 'brain drain' of Africa's health-care professionals, task-shifting and the crisis in health-care human resources. The widespread presumed cause of shortages of skilled health-care staff in sub-Saharan Africa was overdetermined by a compelling narrative of rich countries stealing poor countries' trained health-care professionals. This narrative promotes medical professional interests and ignores historical patterns of underinvestment in health-care systems and structures. Sociological theories of medicalization suggest that the international marketization of medical recruitment is a key site where the uneven global development of capital is at work. A radical reconfiguration of medical staffing along the lines of 'task-shifting' in rich and poor countries' health-care systems alike offers one means of thinking about global equity in access to quality care.

Keywords: critical review; global equity; health-care professionals; migration.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Delivery of Health Care
  • Emigration and Immigration / statistics & numerical data*
  • Emigration and Immigration / trends
  • Female
  • Global Health*
  • Health Services Needs and Demand
  • Health Workforce / organization & administration*
  • Humans
  • Internationality
  • Male
  • Medical Tourism / trends
  • Nurses / supply & distribution*
  • Physicians / supply & distribution*
  • Sweden