KUMJ | VOL. 15 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 57 | JAN.-MARCH, 2017
Factors Influencing Brain Drain among Nepalese Nurses
Thapa B, Shrestha K
Abstract: Background
Brain drain means migration of technically skilled people from one country to
another country. Migration of health workers including nurses are the result of
interplay of many push and pull factors. Push factors are those conditions that
influence the nurses’ decision to leave their own country. Conversely, pull factors are
those conditions in a given country that attract nurses, influencing their movement
to that country.
Objective
The objective of this study was to identify push and pull factors of brain drain among
the Nepalese nurses.
Method
Descriptive cross sectional study was done among 228 Nepalese nurses working in five
different countries in 2016 by using quota sampling technique. A self administered
questionnaire consisting of structured four-point Likert scale was designed to collect
information on push and pull factors of brain drain. Descriptive and inferential
statistics were computed using SPSS version 16.
Result
Many of brain drained nurses had ranked very important push factor was personal
ambition (72.8%) and very important pull factor was better job and career opportunity
(77.2%). Majority of nurses working in Nepal had ranked very important push factor
was lack of job and career opportunity (86.0%) and pull factor was better job and
career opportunity (85.1%). All push and pull factors were significantly associated
with brain drain.
Conclusion
Most of the Nepalese nurses were forced to go abroad due to personal ambition,
followed by low salary, and lack of job and career opportunity. Nurse migration out
of Nepal is likely to persist and even increase if underlying factors aren’t properly
resolved.
Keyword : Brain drain, nurses, pull factors, push factors