United Kingdom
Factors Predicting Team Climate and Its Relationship with Quality of Care in General Practice
Quality of care in general practice may be affected by the team climate perceived by its health and non-health professionals. This study aimed to explore individual and practice factors that were associated with team climate, and to explore the relationship between team climate and quality of care. [from abstract]
- 463 reads
Using Bilateral Arrangements to Manage Migration of Health Care Workers: the Case of South Africa and the United Kingdom
This presentation from the 2004 Seminar on Health and Migration details factors contributing to international migration of healthcare workers and strategies to counter this trend.
- 396 reads
Internationally Trained Pharmacists in Great Britain: What do Registration Data Tell Us About Their Recruitment?
Internationally trained health professionals are an important part of the domestic workforce, but little is known about pharmacists who come to work in Great Britain. This paper explores the extent to which Great Britain is relying on the contribution of internationally trained pharmacists and to explore their routes of entry and demographic characteristics and compare them to those of pharmacists trained in Great Britain. [adapted from abstract]
- 426 reads
Losing out Twice? Skill Wastage of Overseas Health Professionals in the UK
This presentation details issues surrounding the recruitment and utilization of foreign health professionals in the UK.
- 366 reads
Going Global? The Regulation of Nurse Migration in the UK
This presentation addresses issues pertaining to nurse migration in the UK including trends, patterns and the impact of soft regulation.
- 421 reads
Migrant Care Workers in the UK Labor market
This presentation explores the primary characteristics of the migrant labor force in the UK healthcare sector, including the implications for policies regulating migration and the care sector.
- 414 reads
Primary Care Groups: Improving the Quality of Care Through Clinical Governance
This article discusses the agenda for monitoring and improving the quality of health care through the use of clinical governance in National Health Service organizations in the UK. [adapted from introduction]
- 390 reads
Trends in London’s NHS Workforce: an Updated Analysis of Key Data
This working paper aims to outline the evolving picture of how London’s health care labour market is performing within the context of these changes by comparing previous findings with more recent data. It also looks at the challenges ahead and some possible ways forward. [adapted from introduction]
- 392 reads
Internationally Recruited Nurses from India and the Philippines in the United Kingdom: the Decision to Emigrate
The United Kingdom has recruited nurses from countries with a reported surplus in their nursing workforce, such as India and the Philippines. However, little is known about the decision to emigrate made by nurses from these countries. One theory suggests that individuals weigh the benefits and costs of migration: the push and pull factors. This paper challenges the restricted economic focus of this predominant theory and compares the diverse motivations of nurses from different countries as well as those of nurses with previous migratory experience and first-time migrants. [from abstract]
- 615 reads
What Can Health Care Professionals in the United Kingdom Learn from Malawi?
This commentary article is focused on encouraging debate and discussion as to how health care professionals in the developed world might wish to re-think the relationship with colleagues in other health care environments and consider how to work together on a theme of two-way shared learning rather than one-way aid. [adapted from abstract]
- 410 reads
Does a Code Make a Difference - Assessing the English Code of Practice on International Recruitment
International recruitment of health professionals has been high on the policy debate agenda in recent years with increasing advocacy for the development of an international code of practice, notably the current draft for a WHO global code. This paper assesses the effect of the first national code, which has been in place in England since 2001 and as such has lessons for current initiatives in other countries and globally. [from introduction]
- 477 reads
Pay for Performance in Primary Care in England and California: Comparison of Unintended Consequences
This study undertook an in-depth exploration of the unintended consequences of pay-for-performance programs In England and California. The authors interviewed primary care physicians in California and England and compared unintended consequences in each setting. [adapted from abstract]
- 429 reads
Modern Supervision in Action: a Practical Guide for Midwives
The aims of this publication are to encourage midwives and student midwives to make the most of supervision by working in partnership with their supervisor; provide clear information about the supervisory process and the interface between supervision and midwifery practice; and inform midwives and student midwives about the changing role of the supervisor of midwives. [from introduction]
- 704 reads
Healthcare Workers' Attitudes to Working During Pandemic Influenza: a Qualitative Study
The UK healthcare system's ability to cope during an influenza pandemic will largely depend on the number of healthcare workers (HCWs) who are able and willing to work through the crisis. This paper includes the results of a qualitative study exploring the views of UK HCWs on working during an influenza pandemic in order to identify factors that might influence their willingness and ability to work. [from abstract]
- 483 reads
Diagnostics: Key Issues for Workforce Planning
The objective of this paper is to identify the future workforce challenges that will have a profound impact on the capacity to recruit and retain staff. In addition, issues that pertain to key staff groups for this care group will be identified. [from introduction]
- 570 reads
Staying the Course: Reducing Attrition in Diagnostic and Therapeutic Radiography Degree Courses
This report discusses attrition rates in diagnostic and therapeutic radiography degree courses, and includes recommendations on how these rates could be reduced. [from introduction]
- 450 reads
Long-term Conditions: Key Issues for Workforce Planning
The objective of this report is to identify future workforce challenges that will have a profound impact on the capacity to recruit and retain staff. In addition, issues that pertain to key staff groups for this care group will be identified. [from introduction]
- 478 reads
Orthopedics: Key Issues for Workforce Planning
The objective of this paper is to identify the future workforce challenges that will have a profound impact on the capacity to recruit and retain staff. In addition, issues that pertain to key staff groups for this care group will be identified. [from introduction]
- 350 reads
Migration of Health Workers: the UK Perspective to 2006
Most healthcare in the UK is delivered through the National Health Service (NHS). Shortages of skilled staff led to policy changes including international recruitment of health professionals. Subsequent changes in the UK migration policy have impacted international recruitment, leading to a significant reduction in the inflow of international clinicians to the NHS. [adapted from summary]
- 503 reads
Assessing the Impact of a New Health Sector Pay System Upon NHS Staff in the United Kingdom
This paper reports on the design and implementation of a completely new pay system in the National Health Service (NHS) in England.Pay and pay systems are a critical element in any health sector human resource strategy. Changing a pay system can be one strategy to achieve or sustain organizational change. [from abstract]
- 671 reads
Workforce Participation Among International Medical Graduates in the National Health Service of England: a Retrospective Longitudinal Study
Balancing medical workforce supply with demand requires good information about factors affecting retention. Overseas qualified doctors comprise 30% of the National Health Service workforce in England yet little is known about the impact of country of qualification on length of stay. We aimed to address this need. [from abstract]
- 597 reads
Future Pharmacy Workforce Requirements: Workforce Modelling and Policy Recommendations
The aims of the study were to develop a proactive and responsive system for analysing future workforce needs in pharmacy and to make recommendations on how future supply and demand could be managed. [from summary]
- 672 reads
Comprehensive Review of the Pharmacy Workforce
This is a comprehensive review of the Pharmacy Workforce in Northern Ireland undertaken between February and April 2001. It outlines themethodology and discusses the results obtained with regard to the areas of recruitment and retention, demand and models of deployment. [adapted from author]
- 545 reads
Career Intentions of Pharmacy Students
In light of pharmacy workforce shortages in Great Britain, the profession’s regulatory body commissioned a programme of longitudinal work to explore pharmacy career decision-making in relation to influences on career choice and intended career paths. Our objective was to gather data on career intentions that could be used to produce robust predictions about pharmacist supply. [from abstract]
- 689 reads
Who Will be Tomorrow's Pharmacists and Why Did They Study Pharmacy?
This article presents analysis of data collected for the first survey from a longitudinal cohort study about pharmacy careers, focusing on the demographics of the sample and describing students' motivations for entering pharmacy school. [adapted from author]
- 576 reads
Career Choices, Working Patterns and the Future Pharmacy Workforce
In this second article in a series presenting data from a longitudinal cohort study about pharmacy careers, the authors discuss some key issues relating to the 2006 pharmacy graduate cohort's expected career choices and patterns of work. [adapted from author]
- 548 reads
National Workforce Census: the Gendered Nature of Pharmacy Employment in Britain
This final article in a series on the UK census of pharmacists focuses on the employment and work patterns of female pharmacists. [adapted from author]
- 662 reads
National Workforce Census: the Primary Care Pharmacy Workforce in Britain
This article focuses on mix and characteristics of primary care pharmacists in the UK.
- 523 reads
Nurse Workforce Planning in the United Kingdom: a Report for the Royal College of Nursing
This report provides commentary on the current status of nursing workforce planning systems and data in the United Kingdom’s National Health Service. It also identifies current limitations and critical gaps in nurse workforce data availability. Comparisons are made with non UK sources and approaches where these serve to illustrate possible options to improve current UK systems and data gathering approaches. [adapted from abstract]
- 587 reads
Securing Medical Personnel: Case Studies of Two Source Countries and Two Destination Countries
In order to highlight the driving forces determining the international allocation of medical personnel, the cases of four countries (the Philippines and South Africa as source countries, and Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom as destination countries) are examined. The paper concludes that changes in demand generated in major destination countries determine the international allocation of medical personnel at least in the short run. [from abstract]
- 784 reads

