The Primary Care Physician Workforce: Ethical and Policy Implications
Open Access
- 1 November 2007
- journal article
- Published by Annals of Family Medicine in Annals of Family Medicine
- Vol. 5 (6) , 486-491
- https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.720
Abstract
We undertook a study to examine the characteristics of countries exporting physicians to the United States according to their relative contribution to the primary care supply in the United States. We used data from the World Health Organization and from the American Medical Association Physician Masterfile to gather sociodemographic, health system, and health characteristics of countries and the number of international medical graduates (IMGs) for the countries, according to the specialty of their practice in the United States. Countries whose medical school graduates added a relatively greater percentage of the primary care physicians than the overall percentage of primary care physicians in the United States (31%) were poor countries with relatively extreme physician shortages, high infant mortality rates, lower life expectancies, and lower immunization rates than countries contributing relatively more specialists to the US physician workforce. The United States disproportionately uses graduates of foreign medical schools from the poorest and most deprived countries to maintain its primary care physician supply. The ethical aspects of depending on foreign medical graduates is an important issue, especially when it deprives disadvantaged countries of their graduates to buttress a declining US primary care physician supply.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The health migration crisis: the role of four Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development countriesThe Lancet, 2006
- The health workforce: Managing the crisis ethical international recruitment of health professionals: will codes of practice protect developing country health systems?Health Policy, 2006
- [Migration patterns of health professionals].2005
- The flight of physicians from West Africa: Views of African physicians and implications for policySocial Science & Medicine, 2005
- The Metrics of the Physician Brain DrainNew England Journal of Medicine, 2005
- Fatal Flows — Doctors on the MoveNew England Journal of Medicine, 2005
- Contribution of Primary Care to Health Systems and HealthThe Milbank Quarterly, 2005
- Human resources and health outcomes: cross-country econometric studyThe Lancet, 2004
- The changing pool of international medical graduates seeking certification training in US graduate medical education programs.JAMA, 2002
- Initial Practice Locations of International Medical GraduatesHealth Services Research, 2002