The COVID-19 pandemic and health workforce brain drain in Nigeria

Lukman Lawal,Abdulwahab Oluwatomisin Lawal, Opeyemi Pius Amosu, Abdulmujeeb Opeyemi Muhammad-Olodo,Nasir Abdulrasheed,Khalil-ur-Rahman Abdullah, Philemon Barnabas Kuza,Abdullahi Tunde Aborode,Yusuff Adebayo Adebisi, Ahmed Adeseye Kareem, Abdulwahab Aliu, Taiye Muhammed Elelu,Tonderai Murwira

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH(2022)

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Abstract
Over the years, the Nigerian healthcare workforce, including doctors, nurses, and pharmacists have always been known to emigrate to developed countries to practice. However, the recent dramatic increase in this trend is worrisome. There has been a mass emigration of Nigerian healthcare workers to developed countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. While the push factors have been found to include the inadequate provision of personal protective equipment, low monthly hazard allowance, and inconsistent payment of COVID-19 inducement allowance on top of worsening insecurity, the pull factors are higher salaries as well as a safe and healthy working environment. We also discuss how healthcare workers can be retained in Nigeria through increment in remunerations and prompt payment of allowances, and how the brain drain can be turned into a brain gain via the use of electronic data collection tools for Nigerian health workers abroad, implementation of the Bhagwati’s tax system, and establishment of a global skill partnership with developed countries. Graphical Abstract
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Key words
COVID-19 pandemic, Medical brain-drain, Nurses, Pharmacists, Job satisfaction, Healthcare workers, Migration, Global skill partnership model, Nigeria, Africa
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