An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration

Allison Squires,1 Angela Amico2 1College of Nursing, 2Global Institute of Public Health, New York University, New York, NY, USA Abstract: This review seeks to understand the role of remittances in international nurse migration within the context of three theories of international migration: equili...

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Main Authors: Squires A, Amico A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2014-12-01
Series:Nursing : Research and Reviews
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/an-integrative-review-of-the-role-of-remittances-in-international-nurs-peer-reviewed-article-NRR
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spelling doaj-2906c5304393453f9e799d488a4c27762020-11-24T22:24:27ZengDove Medical PressNursing : Research and Reviews2230-522X2014-12-012015default11219783An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migrationSquires AAmico A Allison Squires,1 Angela Amico2 1College of Nursing, 2Global Institute of Public Health, New York University, New York, NY, USA Abstract: This review seeks to understand the role of remittances in international nurse migration within the context of three theories of international migration: equilibrium approaches, social networks, and globalization. To analyze the phenomenon, an integrative review of the literature was conducted. Search terms sought articles discussing, either directly or indirectly, remittances and international nurse migration. The initial search returned 369 articles, and further screening decreased the total to 65. Full text screening reduced the final number for the analysis to 48. A directed content analysis structured the analytic approach by examining how authors discussed remittances in the content and context of the paper. The final analysis showed the majority of papers were policy analyses (five); opinion papers, reviews, or editorials that indirectly discussed remittances (27); or were qualitative and quantitative studies (16), either with primary data collection (14) or secondary data analyses (two). Overall, a nurse’s individual motivation for sending remittances home stemmed from familial factors but was never a primary driver of migration. Domestic labor market factors were more likely to drive nurses to migrate. The nurse’s country of origin also was a factor in the remittance dynamic. The identity of the author of the paper played a role in how they discussed remittances in the context of international nurse migration. The three theories of migration helped explain various aspects of the role of remittances in international nursing migration. While the phenomenon has changed since the 2008 global economic crisis and the passing of the World Health Organization’s Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel in 2010, future research around the role of remittances needs to consider the confluence of gender, social, political, labor market, and economic dynamics, and not just view the phenomenon from an individual lens. Keywords: nursing, health care worker, remittancehttp://www.dovepress.com/an-integrative-review-of-the-role-of-remittances-in-international-nurs-peer-reviewed-article-NRR
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Squires A
Amico A
spellingShingle Squires A
Amico A
An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
Nursing : Research and Reviews
author_facet Squires A
Amico A
author_sort Squires A
title An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
title_short An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
title_full An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
title_fullStr An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
title_full_unstemmed An integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
title_sort integrative review of the role of remittances in international nurse migration
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Nursing : Research and Reviews
issn 2230-522X
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Allison Squires,1 Angela Amico2 1College of Nursing, 2Global Institute of Public Health, New York University, New York, NY, USA Abstract: This review seeks to understand the role of remittances in international nurse migration within the context of three theories of international migration: equilibrium approaches, social networks, and globalization. To analyze the phenomenon, an integrative review of the literature was conducted. Search terms sought articles discussing, either directly or indirectly, remittances and international nurse migration. The initial search returned 369 articles, and further screening decreased the total to 65. Full text screening reduced the final number for the analysis to 48. A directed content analysis structured the analytic approach by examining how authors discussed remittances in the content and context of the paper. The final analysis showed the majority of papers were policy analyses (five); opinion papers, reviews, or editorials that indirectly discussed remittances (27); or were qualitative and quantitative studies (16), either with primary data collection (14) or secondary data analyses (two). Overall, a nurse’s individual motivation for sending remittances home stemmed from familial factors but was never a primary driver of migration. Domestic labor market factors were more likely to drive nurses to migrate. The nurse’s country of origin also was a factor in the remittance dynamic. The identity of the author of the paper played a role in how they discussed remittances in the context of international nurse migration. The three theories of migration helped explain various aspects of the role of remittances in international nursing migration. While the phenomenon has changed since the 2008 global economic crisis and the passing of the World Health Organization’s Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel in 2010, future research around the role of remittances needs to consider the confluence of gender, social, political, labor market, and economic dynamics, and not just view the phenomenon from an individual lens. Keywords: nursing, health care worker, remittance
url http://www.dovepress.com/an-integrative-review-of-the-role-of-remittances-in-international-nurs-peer-reviewed-article-NRR
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