Health Policy
Volume 84, Issue 2-3, 2007, Pages 298-307

International migration patterns of physicians to the United States: A cross-national panel analysis (Article)

Hussey P.S.*
  • a RAND, 1200 S. Hayes St., w6w, Arlington, VA 22202, United States

Abstract

Objectives: To analyze the dynamics of physician international migration patterns and identify the countries deviating most from expected migration rates. Methods: A negative binomial log-linear model of physician migration to the United States from every other country was constructed using a panel of country-level data for years 1994-2000. The model was used to identify factors associated with physician migration and to identify countries with higher or lower rates of physician migration than expected. Results: Physician migration varied with a country's GDP per capita in an inverse-U pattern, with highest migration rates from middle-income countries. The absence of medical schools, immigrant networks in the United States, medical instruction in English, proximity to the United States, and the lack of political and civil liberties were also associated with higher migration rates. Countries with higher-than-predicted migration rates included Iceland, Albania, Armenia, Dominica, Lebanon, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, and Bulgaria. Countries with lower-than-predicted migration rates included Mexico, Japan, Brazil, Zimbabwe, Mauritania, Portugal, Senegal, and France. Conclusions: This analysis shows that many of the most powerful factors associated with physician migration are difficult or impossible for countries to change through public policy. GDP per capita and proximity to the U.S. are two of the most powerful predictors of physician migration. Networks of immigrants in the U.S. and fewer political and civil liberties also put countries at higher risk for physician emigration. Several other factors that were associated with physician migration might be more easily amenable to policy intervention. These factors include the absence of a medical school and medical instruction in English. Policies addressing these factors would involve making several difficult tradeoffs, however. Other examples of policies that are effective in minimizing physician migration might be found by examining countries with lower-than-expected migration rates. © 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Workforce international migration Brain drain

Index Keywords

Albania Portugal France Dominica human immigration Internationality Physicians Mauritania Mexico Iceland United States income Senegal Humans Japan Zimbabwe Article civilization physician attitude politics Models, Statistical Emigration and Immigration Brazil Armenia population migration medical school

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-35448935542&doi=10.1016%2fj.healthpol.2007.04.005&partnerID=40&md5=4010a299dbcd2564a4547ea10de50886

DOI: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2007.04.005
ISSN: 01688510
Cited by: 14
Original Language: English