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Initiated: May 2003
Adopted by the WMA General Assembly, Helsinki 2003
- PREAMBLE
- The WMA acknowledges that temporary stays of physicians
in other countries help both the receiving and the sending
countries to exchange medical knowledge, skills and attitudes.
The exchange of medical professionals is therefore beneficial
for the development of medicine and healthcare systems and
in general deserves the support of national medical associations
as well as governments.
- The WMA Statement on Medical Manpower - 1 (1983,
1986) called upon all National Medical Associations to work
with their governments towards solutions to the emerging
problems related to the medical workforce.
- The WMA Resolution on the Medical Workforce (1998)
identified the major components of the medical workforce
situation that need to be taken into account when developing
a national workforce policy.
- For several decades many governments, employers and medical
associations have misinterpreted demographical data regarding
the number of physicians that are required. Young people
seeing employment as physicians have often been seriously
affected by poor medical workforce planning.
- In many countries, including the wealthiest ones, there
is a shortage of physicians. A major reason for the shortage
is a failure to educate enough physicians to meet the needs
of the country. Other reasons for the net loss of physicians
are the recruitment of physicians to other professions,
early retirement and emigration, and the problems of combining
professional and family responsibilities, all of which are
often due to poor working conditions for physicians.
- Some countries have traditionally solved their need for
physicians by recruiting medical graduates from other countries.
This practice continues today.
- The flow of international migration of physicians is generally
from poorer to wealthier countries. The poorer countries
bear the expense of educating the migrating physicians and
receive no recompense when they enter other countries. The
receiving countries gain a valuable resource without paying
for it, and in the process they save the cost of educating
their own physicians.
- Physicians do have valid reasons for migrating, for example,
to seek better career opportunities and to escape poor working
and living conditions.
- There is considerable international activity underway
at present to determine the nature and extent of physician
migration and related medical workforce issues. The World
Medical Association recognizes that there is an important
ethical dimension to these issues and has developed this
statement to guide national medical associations and policy
makers in their efforts to find solutions to these issues.
- RELEVANT ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
- Justice - Distributive justice requires an equitable
allocation of resources among individuals and groups. Corrective
justice requires action to address inequities. Procedural
justice requires that efforts to achieve equity respect
the rights of all who are involved.
- Co-operation - Problems that affect two or more
groups, including nations, should be resolved by working
together, either bilaterally or through multilateral organizations
such as the World Medical Association.
- Autonomy - An individual's right to determine his
or her own destiny should be respected as long as it does
not interfere with the corresponding right of others, in
which case a fair process for resolving conflicts should
be implemented.
- RECOMMENDATIONS
- National medical associations, governments and employers
should exercise utmost care in utilizing demographic data
to make projections about future requirements for physicians
and in communicating these projections to young people contemplating
a medical career.
- Every country should do its utmost to educate an adequate
number of physicians, taking into account its needs and
resources. A country should not rely on immigration from
other countries to meet its need for physicians.
- Every country should do its utmost to retain its physicians
in the profession as well as in the country by providing
them with the support they need to meet their personal and
professional goals, taking into account the country's needs
and resources.
- Countries that wish to recruit physicians from another
country should only do so in terms of and in accordance
with the provisions of a Memorandum of Understanding entered
into between the countries.
- Physicians should not be prevented from leaving their
home or adopted country to pursue career opportunities in
another country.
- Countries that recruit physicians from other countries
should ensure that recruiters provide full and accurate
information to potential recruits on the nature and requirements
of the position to be filled, on immigration, administrative
and contractual requirements, and on the legal and regulatory
conditions for the practice of medicine in the recruiting
country.
- Physicians who are working, either permanently or temporarily,
in a country other than their home country should be treated
fairly in relation to other physicians in that country (for
example, equal opportunity career options and equal payment
for the same work).
- Nothing should prevent countries from entering into bilateral
agreements and agreements of understanding, as provided
for in international law and with due cognisance of international
human rights law, so as to effect meaningful co-operation
on health care delivery, including the exchange of physicians.
17.9.2003
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