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Gary L. ChamberlainMarch 28, 2011

During a recent hospital stay, I was impressed by the care, dedication and efficiency of the nurses and nursing assistants. Yet I could hardly fail to notice the heavy demands made upon them, physically and emotionally. Many work 10- or 12-hour shifts, maintain computerized records on nearly every move their patients make and still manage to smile and be courteous. Several of my nurses and assistants were from outside the United States. They worked just as tirelessly as the others; I wondered whether they received the same pay and benefits. At times, some talked about the demands of the job and their physical fatigue.

The largest nursing strike in U.S. history took place last June, as more than 12,000 registered nurses in Minnesota mounted a protest to pressure hospitals to cap the number of patients per nurse. The imposition of such caps would benefit patients as well as nurses. A study by the University of Pennsylvania revealed that smaller workloads lower the risk of death to patients during surgery.

The United States is suffering a severe and troublesome nursing shortage. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than one million new and replacement nurses will be needed by 2016. As baby boomers age, they are requiring more care. The need for trained nurses is rising even as the supply is diminishing, and the nurses themselves are aging. In a recent survey 35 percent of nurses between the ages of 45 and 60 said they plan to retire, switch to a less demanding role or work as a travel nurse in the next few years. Surprisingly, nurses under the age of 30 show the same inclinations: Fully one-third said, even before they graduated, that they would leave nursing within a year of graduation. The realities of the work itself include dissatisfaction, burnout, turnover and physical and emotional stress.

Where can the nation obtain qualified nurses? From abroad, of course. To paraphrase Pete Seeger’s popular ballad from the 1960s: “Where have all the nurses gone? To the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada, every one.” Currently, about 5 percent of all nurses in the United States are foreign-educated. In 2003 foreign-educated nurses made up 14 percent of all newly licensed nurses; the proportion continues to rise. Most of the recruiting has been undertaken by health care agencies using private organizations and government agencies. More recently private, for-profit agencies have entered the market with little regulation nationally or internationally. These agencies, many of which are run by private individuals, often operate on behalf of developed countries. The recruitment process raises a host of ethical questions: Is such recruitment simply the operation of the free market in a globalized economy? If so, are nurses now seen as commodities?

Certainly the push-and-pull factors affecting the decisions of nurses to emigrate are powerful. Push factors include low pay, poor working conditions, limited career and educational opportunities, economic uncertainty and dangerous situations like those involving H.I.V./AIDS and war.

Nursing opportunities in the United States, the United Kingdom and elsewhere offer nurses better salaries and more benefits than they can obtain in their own poorer countries. These nurses also learn new methods of nursing, skills, remedies and techniques. Most can send part of their salaries home in the form of remittances to relatives, who benefit from the income and spend it in their local economy. At the same time, recruitment of nurses from the developing world leads to a brain and resource drain, not just of nurses in general but of those who are most highly qualified. The export of nurses means fewer are available for the home country, a decline in the quality of its patient care and a weakening of its health system.

The Philippine Experience

The Philippines serves as something of a case study, demonstrating these factors at play. More than 150,000 nurses from the Philippines are working internationally (85 percent of all their nurses currently employed). Yet the Philippines has a nursing shortage of its own—with some 30,000 unfilled positions. This affects poor and rural communities the most. Such unregulated recruitment resembles a new form of poaching, by which a poor nation’s scarce resources are drawn away for the benefit of a developed country.

In the countries that import foreign nurses, nursing associations have raised objections. First, they say, the practice merely rotates nurses; it does not actually increase the number of nurses worldwide, which is required to solve global shortages. Second, as nurses from countries with very traditional cultures and fixed gender roles enter the United States or other nursing systems, they indirectly undermine the ability of local nurses to establish more positive and independent roles in relation to doctors, administrators and others in the medical establishment.

A further consideration concerns the issue of H.I.V./AIDS. Many countries exporting nurses, like South Africa, have large populations with H.I.V./AIDS. The resulting infections and deaths put a tremendous strain on the nurses who stay while others leave. At the same time, nurses in those countries experience the “push” factor to earn more in order to support those at home who are ill and cannot work or provide for themselves. Do the benefits to individual nurses imported to developed countries outweigh the losses of those same educated nurses to their own countries, where nursing shortages are keen?

Catholic Social Teaching

Foreign nurses may face discrimination in the workplace—subtle prejudices that affect promotion, shift rotation and support. After the right to a just wage, perhaps no other right is as essential to protecting the workers’ basic dignity as is the right to organize and build unions. In his encyclical “On Human Work” (1981), Pope John Paul II wrote: “The experience of history teaches that organizations of this type [unions] are...a mouthpiece for the struggle for social justice, for the just rights of working people in accordance with their individual professions.” But do foreign workers organize or join existing unions? Can they?

As globalization affects the nursing profession, the principles of the common good and the church’s preferential option for the poor raise other questions: Is the recruitment of foreign nurses sustainable? Does it contribute to the well-being of the nurses and also help promote the health of developing countries? Do the current arrangements guiding international recruitment of nurses accentuate existing poverty gaps by straining resources in the exporting country, leaving more people, usually the poorest and most marginalized, without health care?

The code of the International Council of Nurses reflects several of the major principles of Catholic social teaching. Many code provisions, for example, are based on the principle of human dignity. The guidelines address concern for fair wages, healthy working conditions, a balance of interests around the common good, protections for poor nations with a shortage of nurses, the right to join nursing associations and freedom from discrimination. Of special note is the I.C.N.’s concern that while nurses have a right to migrate, international migration may have adverse effects on the “health care quality in countries seriously depleted of their nursing workforce.” The I.C.N. strongly condemns recruiting by countries that have not dealt with the basic problems that cause their own nurses to leave the profession.

Three possible approaches could be taken in developing guidelines for the international recruitment of nurses. The first relies on a cost/benefit model and adopts the perspective of free market capitalism. This approach considers the situation as an open market in which nurses, as free agents, look for the best wages, the best setting in which to develop their skills and increasing economic and political security.

The second approach takes a highly critical view of the current arrangements, calling continued reliance on market forces unsustainable and unjust, an irresponsible drain upon the scarce resources of developing countries. In this structural view, adopted by liberation groups and human rights workers, the globalization of nurses, primarily women, is part of a pattern of trafficking, a new colonialism of people as “resources.” The recruitment of foreign nurses should proceed only under heavy international regulation. The goal would be to address the dysfunctional health care systems in host/importing countries, while sustaining health care systems in developing countries.

The third approach, which follows the themes of Catholic social teaching and the code of the I.C.N., stresses the protection of human rights and the improvement of working conditions through cooperation among national and international groups and nongovernmental organizations. Initially, there is a call to the host countries to compensate developing countries formally for the loss of their scarce resources. Then, international regulation and supervision must ensure both that host countries revive their nursing recruitment programs at home and that developing countries are not left with too few nurses to serve their own people.

A 2003 statement of the American Federation of Teachers health care program refers to “a delicate balance” among the needs of host countries and the strains and losses to the health systems of the exporting countries. The difficult circumstances faced by many developing countries—such as H.I.V./AIDS pandemics, poor nutrition, high rates of communicable diseases, along with inadequate health services and the loss of nurses to fill the shortages in the developed world—indeed raise critical ethical questions of justice.

Without such remedies as compensation and international regulation, the continued globalization of nurses will result in benefits for some nurses and a short-term solution to shortages in host countries; but it could also spell long-term disaster for developing countries while failing to solve the long-term problem of host countries. National regulations for managing international nurse recruitment have been introduced in some countries, but they are difficult to enforce. The nurse-recruitment process must undergo some form of international regulation. The crisis in the United States and in the international recruitment of nurses calls for immediate international regulation and oversight. Meanwhile, the developed countries should redouble their efforts to train nurses of their own.

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13 years 8 months ago
Truly a great piece.  It's about time the issue is being looked at and hopefully will be addressed very soon. 
David Smith
13 years 8 months ago
Thanks for this.  Worth re-reading.  Touches many important points - probably the politically most urgent ones.

As usual with resource issues, it comes down to people.  To what extent should governments have the power to prevent people from migrating, on the one side, and the power to encourage them to migrate, on the other?  And to what extent should governments have the power to force people to do one or another kind of work?

For strong-central-government advocates, it's easy.  The only important thing is the well being of the collective, arbitrarily defined by the government of the moment.  For the rest of us, it's much more nuanced and complicated, because we believe that individuals have human rights apart from and parallel to those of the collectivity.

Something that's touched on here only lightly is the "right" of patients to receive the best care possible.  If nurses are underpaid and overworked, patients, not only nurses, will suffer.  So to what extent should efficiency be a primary motivator in health-care planning, and to what extent should efficiency be subordinated to quality of work and treatment?
13 years 8 months ago
I actually turned to the cover to check the date on this issue of America, thinking I was reading a copy that had gotten lost in the mail.  Although I agree that there are serious ethical issues related to the practice of recruiting professionals from other countries, there doesn't seem to be a nursing shortage at this time.  The hospital with which I am associated has had recent RN graduates working as dietary aides since graduation last spring while they wait for a nuring postion to open up.  My own niece had to go 2000 miles from home to find a nursing job after graduation last year.  She has only part time work and neither the specialty nor the shift is her preference.  Good article - but is it timely?
CATHERINE MARESCA
13 years 8 months ago
Regarding Foreign Nurses and Priests. For ten years or more I've been listening to foreign-born priests struggle to pray and preach in English. I know they are here in part to help the church avoid ordaining married men and women. I have wondered, though, who is preaching to their own people, and have we created a kind of spiritual brain drain from third world countries in an effort to fill our own pulpits? Meanwhile, qualified leaders sit in the pews. I welcome the cultural exchange and service to immigrant communities these priests represent, but hope this will be balanced by the kind of recruitment that Chamberlain advocates for nurses. To end as he did, the developed countries should redouble their efforts to train priests of their own.
13 years 7 months ago
A few concerns not addressed in the article:
1) Brain Drain-is it ethical for us to create a nursing shortage in a Third World country simply to appease our perceived problem?  I agree with Mr. Smith's comment above reagrding the "shortage".
2) The nursing shortage is not so much with staff nurses, but with faculty to teach nursing students.  That is where the shortage lies. Faculty is retiring and few are taking their places. There are waiting lists for nursing school admissions.
3) Brain Waste-again, should we encourage others to come to the US only to have them work beneath their educational level because they cannot pass the examinations the US requires for licensure.  Working knowledge of the English language and a nursing education is not enough to be considered a valuable member of the health care team in the US. The US has a great deal of technology that Third World countries do not have.  There are many frustrated foreign educated MDs and nurses working beneath their educational experiences.

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