Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma

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Nursing Migration and Nursing Migration and the the Global Health Care Global Health Care Economy Economy Dr Mireille Kingma International Council of Nurses

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Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma International Council of Nurses. International Migration. What do we know? 3% of the world’s population 191 million people 48% female Industrialised countries: One out of 10 International labour market. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma

Page 1: Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma

Nursing Migration and theNursing Migration and theGlobal Health Care Global Health Care

EconomyEconomy

Dr Mireille KingmaInternational Council of Nurses

Page 2: Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma

International MigrationInternational Migration

What do we know?

• 3% of the world’s population

• 191 million people

• 48% female

• Industrialised countries: One out of 10

• International labour market

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GlobalisationGlobalisation Better communication –

access to information

Better transport options

More bi-lateral/multi-lateral trade

agreements

Mutual recognition agreements

Shortage facilitated immigration

International recruitment practices

Page 4: Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma

Current WorkforceCurrent Workforce

• Industrialised countries• Australia, Canada, UK, US• Switzerland• Ireland

• Developing countries• Cameroon• Ghana• South Africa

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Projected Nurse ShortfallsProjected Nurse Shortfalls

• 2010: Australia – 40,000• 2012: USA – 1 million

• 2016: Canada – 113,000

• 2017:

– Netherlands: 7,000

– Norway: 3,300

– Switzerland: 3,000

(1%-5% of practicing registered workforce)

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Supply and DemandSupply and DemandTypes of migrant nurses

– Economic migrant– Quality-of-life migrant– Career-move migrant– Partner migrant– Adventurer migrant– Survival migrant– Holiday workers– Student migrant– Return migrant

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Nurse ABNurse AB

Country A

Country B

Page 8: Nursing Migration and the Global Health Care Economy Dr Mireille Kingma

Migration PathwayMigration Pathway

ServicesGoods

Agencies Institutions

EntrepreneursRegulatory Bodies

Businesses

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Education

• Training for export• Foreign student

– Fees– Language competence– Accommodation/travel/food

• Satellite campuses• Distance learning• Employment provider• Private business investment• Perks: recruitment/retention

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AccreditationAccreditation

• Screening

• Testing

• Supervised clinical placement

• Tutoring

• Placement agencies

• Supervisors

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The Right to WorkThe Right to Work

• Visas– Temporary– Permanent residence

• Employment– Journals– Internet– Diaspora– Individual initiatives– Recruitment agencies

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Spin-Off ServicesSpin-Off Services

• Immigration lawyers

• The move– Persons– Furniture/belongings

• Housing

• Phone services

• Banking services

• Securities

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Exploitation/Fraud• Agency fees• Accommodation

– Quality– Charges

• Visa fraud• Contracts

– False representation– Deskilling– Substitution

• Corruption• Freedom of association

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RemittancesRemittances

• US$300 billion – 2006

• Reaching 10% world’s population– Consumption– Education– Investment

• Drain?

• Gain?

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Brain CirculationBrain Circulation

• Development opportunities

• Employment opportunities

• Business opportunities

• Multicultural nursing-competitive edge

• Positive practice environments

• Innovation

• Dissemination of good practice

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Global Health Care Global Health Care EconomyEconomy

• Direct impact on society and other sectors, incl commerce

• Nurse migration is part of globalization initiatives

• Recruitment and deployment must be regulated

• Self-sustainable workforces• Human rights must be respected

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