Nursing Inquiry
Volume 8, Issue 4, 2001, Pages 213-229

The globalisation of the nursing workforce: Barriers confronting overseas qualified nurses in Australia (Article)

Hawthorne L.*
  • a Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic. 3010, Australia, Deportment of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

Abstract

Recent decades have coincided with the rapid globalisation of the nursing profession. Within Australia there has been rising dependence on overseas qualified nurses (OQNs) to compensate for chronic nurse shortages related to the continued exodus of Australian nurses overseas and to emerging opportunities in other professions. Between 1983/4 and 1994/5, 30 544 OQNs entered Australia on either a permanent or temporary basis, counter-balancing the departure overseas of 23 613 locally trained and 6519 migrant nurses (producing a net gain of just 412 nurses in all). The period 1995/6-1999/2000 saw an additional 11 757 permanent or long-term OQN arrivals, with nursing currently ranked third target profession in Australia's skill migration program, in the context of continuing attrition among local nurses. This pattern of reliance on OQNs is a phenomenon simultaneously occurring in the UK, the US, Canada and the Middle East - the globalisation of nursing reflecting not merely Western demand but the growing agency and participation of women in skilled migration, their desire for improved quality of life, enhanced professional opportunity and remuneration, family reunion and adventure.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

education World Health social psychology Foreign Professional Personnel Australia methodology demography human Interprofessional Relations statistics nursing staff financial management Residence Characteristics health personnel attitude Attitude of Health Personnel health foreign worker Humans female personnel management Nursing Administration Research Behavior Article Personnel Selection migration Prejudice Emigration and Immigration employment Power (Psychology) public relations Marketing of Health Services

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0035749440&doi=10.1046%2fj.1320-7881.2001.00115.x&partnerID=40&md5=1c2c1f8e8f9b578b7669595640fe82c7

DOI: 10.1046/j.1320-7881.2001.00115.x
ISSN: 13207881
Cited by: 77
Original Language: English