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Using overseas registered nurses to fill employment gaps in rural health services: Quick fix or sustainable strategy?

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TLDR
Recruitment of married overseas trained nurses is more sustainable than that of single registered nurses, however, the process of recruitment for the hospital and potential employees is costly and rural hospitality diffuses some of these expenses by the employing hospitals providing emergency accommodation and necessary furnishings.
Abstract
Objective: This study sought to identify and evaluate approaches used to attract internationally trained nurses from traditional and non-traditional countries and incentives employed to retain them in small rural hospitals in Gippsland, Victoria. Design: An exploratory descriptive design. Setting: Small rural hospitals in Gippsland, Victoria. Participants: Hospital staff responsible for recruitment of nurses and overseas trained nurses from traditional and non-traditional sources (e.g. England, Scotland, India, Zimbabwe, Holland, Singapore, Malaysia). Results and Conclusion: Recruitment of married overseas trained nurses is more sustainable than that of single registered nurses, however, the process of recruitment for the hospital and potential employees is costly. Rural hospitality diffuses some of these expenses by the employing hospitals providing emergency accommodation and necessary furnishings. Cultural differences and dissonance regarding practice create barriers for some of the overseas trained nurses to move towards a more sanguine position. On the positive side, single overseas registered nurses use the opportunity to work in rural Australian hospitals as an effective working holiday that promotes employment in larger, more specialized hospitals. Overall both the registered nurses and the employees believe the experience to be beneficial rather than detrimental.

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Lived experiences of internationally educated nurses in hospitals in the United States of America.

TL;DR: The study findings provide important first-hand insights from the subjective perspectives of the IENs in US hospitals and will guide recruitment and retention of a diverse nursing workforce in the USA.
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Sustaining and growing the rural nursing and midwifery workforce: understanding the issues and isolating directions for the future.

TL;DR: The future of the rural nursing and midwifery workforce will only be secured if Government invests to a greater degree in both education and training and the development of a nationally agreed remuneration scale that allows for part-time work.
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Facilitating the transition of Asian nurses to work in Australia.

TL;DR: Addressing the findings of this research may help nurse managers better anticipate and address issues which may cause difficulties for overseas nurses' adjusting to nursing in a new culture.
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Understanding skilled migrants’ employment in the host country: a multidisciplinary review and a conceptual model

TL;DR: The authors reviewed and synthesized the empirical research on skilled migrants' qualification-matching employment across multiple disciplines and highlighted the role of multi-level factors and moderating variables associated with skilled migrants’ possibility of obtaining qualification-matched employment.
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Nurse migration from India: a literature review.

TL;DR: An exponential growth in nurse recruitment efforts, nurse migration, and a concomitant growth in educational institutions within India with regional variations in nurse migration patterns is found.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Push and pull factors in international nurse migration.

TL;DR: The push and pull factors of migration are described in relation to international recruitment and migration of nurses to seek better wages and working conditions than they have in their native countries.
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Lived experiences of immigrant nurses in New South Wales, Australia: searching for meaning.

TL;DR: The study highlights the continuing existence of a social and cultural distance between nurses of the dominant culture and nurses from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why doctors leave rural practice.

TL;DR: The optimum period of stay in rural practice should be reconsidered, such that moderate stays should be rewarded in a way that retains the doctors in some form of rural, or near-rural practice.
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Overseas-trained doctors in Australia: community integration and their intention to stay in a rural community.

TL;DR: The importance of a supportive environment within the clinic and community awareness of the OTDs' needs should not be underestimated as influences on an OTD's retention in a rural community.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors associated with rural doctors’ intention to continue a rural career: A survey of 3072 doctors in Japan

TL;DR: Rural background, undergraduate exposure to rural practice, multispecialty-rotation in postgraduate training and current administrative position had positive correlations with the intention to continue in logistic regression analysis.
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