Exodus of healthcare workers from poor countries worsening, WHO says
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[March 15, 2023]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - Poorer countries are increasingly losing healthcare
workers to wealthier ones as the latter seek to shore up their own staff
losses from the COVID-19 pandemic, sometimes through active recruitment,
the World Health Organization said on Tuesday.
The trend for nurses and other staff to leave parts of Africa or
Southeast Asia for better opportunities in wealthier countries in the
Middle East or Europe was already under way before the pandemic but has
accelerated since, the U.N. health agency said, as global competition
heats up.
"Health workers are the backbone of every health system, and yet 55
countries with some of the world's most fragile health systems do not
have enough and many are losing their health workers to international
migration," said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO director-general.
He was referring to a new WHO list of vulnerable countries which has
added eight extra states since it was last published in 2020. They are:
Comoros, Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, East Timor, Laos, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.
Jim Campbell, director of the WHO's health workforce department, told
journalists safeguards for countries on the WHO list were important so
they "can continue to rebuild and recover from the pandemic without an
additional loss of workers to migration".
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Director-General of the World Health
Organisation (WHO) Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus attends an ACANU
briefing on global health issues, including COVID-19 pandemic and
war in Ukraine in Geneva, Switzerland, December 14, 2022.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/
Some 115,000 healthcare workers died
from COVID around the world during the pandemic but many more left
their professions due to burnout and depression, he said. As a sign
of the strain, protests and strikes have been organised in more than
100 countries since the pandemic began, he added, including in
Britain and the United States.
"We need to protect the workforce if we wish to
ensure the population has access to care," said Campbell.
Asked which countries were attracting more workers, he said wealthy
OECD countries and Gulf states but added that competition between
African countries had also intensified.
The WHO says it is not against migration of workers if it was
managed appropriately. In 2010, it released a voluntary global code
of practice on the international recruitment of health personnel and
urges its members to follow it.
(Reporting by Emma Farge; Editing by Alison Williams)
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