ABSTRACT
Objective: to study the perceptions of medical students about factors responsible for physicians' migration
Study Design: cross-sectional survey
Place and Duration of Study: Dow Medical College and Civil Hospital, Karachi, from April to May 2015
Methodology: a self-administered structured questionnaire was used including demographic details, attitudes about push and pull factors of migration, and reasons for migrating or not migrating abroad. Final year students and interns were included. Likert scale from 1 to 4 [1=strongly disagree to 4=strongly agree] was used to assess attitudes. Data was analyzed by SPSS version 16
Results: a total of 240 medical students, mostly females [n=181, 75%] [60% final year and 40% interns], participated in the study. Majority wished to go abroad [n=127; 54%] with United States being the favorite destination [n=80; 66.1%] and internal medicine fields being the preferred choice for specialization [n=126; 54%]. The major pull factors were better quality of postgraduate education abroad [n=110; 48.2%] and economic prospects [80; 35.2%]; while the push factors were a weak healthcare system [n=219; 94.3%], inadequate salary structure [n=205; 88.3%], insecurity [n=219; 93.9%] and increasing religious intolerance in Pakistan [n=183; 78.5%]
Conclusion: this survey highlights the continuing trend of physician migration from Pakistan owing to interplay of various push and pull factors. Majority of our medical students wish to migrate, mainly due to low salaries, poor job structure, and insecurity. Urgent interventions are required to reverse this trend of medical brain-drain