School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Med Educ. 2022 May;56(5):504-515. doi: 10.1111/medu.14708. Epub 2022 Jan 5.
International medical graduates (IMGs) represent a large portion of practising doctors in many countries. Many experience difficulties, including higher rates of complaints against them and lower exam pass rates. The UK's General Medical Council (GMC) recently set targets to 'eliminate disproportionate complaints' and 'eradicate disadvantage and discrimination in medical education'. Our timely meta-ethnography aimed to synthesise existing qualitative literature on the wider personal and professional experiences of IMGs to identify factors affecting IMGs' professional practice (either directly or indirectly).
In September 2019, we systematically searched Medline, Embase, Cochrane, PsycINFO, ERIC and EdResearch for peer-reviewed qualitative and mixed-methods articles that described experiences of IMGs. We extracted participant quotes and authors' themes from included articles and used the technique of meta-ethnography to synthesise the data and develop new overarching concepts.
Of the 1613 articles identified, 57 met our inclusion criteria. In total, the articles corresponded to 46 studies that described the experiences of 1142 IMGs practising in all six continents in a range of settings, including primary and secondary care. We developed five key concepts: migration dimensions (issues considered by IMGs when migrating), a challenging start (the stressful early period), degree of dissonance (between the IMG and host country in relation to the four main barriers of language, culture, medical education and belonging), levelling the playing field (interventions to reduce the impact of the barriers) and survive then thrive (adjustments IMGs made). A conceptual model that brings these constructs together in a line of argument is presented.
This meta-ethnography, based on a large amount of diverse qualitative studies, is the first to provide a comprehensive picture of the experiences and challenges that IMGs face before and after migration. Our results should be used to guide the development of interventions aiming to support IMGs and meet the GMC targets.
国际医学毕业生(IMGs)在许多国家的执业医生中占很大比例。许多人都面临着困难,包括更高的投诉率和更低的考试通过率。英国医学总会(GMC)最近设定了目标,要“消除不成比例的投诉”和“消除医学教育中的劣势和歧视”。我们的元人种学研究及时进行,旨在综合现有的关于 IMG 更广泛的个人和专业经验的定性文献,以确定影响 IMG 专业实践的因素(直接或间接)。
我们于 2019 年 9 月系统地检索了 Medline、Embase、Cochrane、PsycINFO、ERIC 和 EdResearch 中描述 IMG 经历的同行评议定性和混合方法文章。我们从纳入的文章中提取参与者引述和作者的主题,并使用元人种学技术综合数据并开发新的总体概念。
在确定的 1613 篇文章中,有 57 篇符合我们的纳入标准。这些文章总共对应 46 项研究,描述了来自六大洲的 1142 名 IMG 在各种环境中的实践经验,包括初级和二级保健。我们开发了五个关键概念:移民维度(IMG 在移民时考虑的问题)、艰难的开端(紧张的早期阶段)、不和谐程度(IMG 与东道国之间在语言、文化、医学教育和归属感四个主要障碍方面的差异)、公平竞争环境(减少障碍影响的干预措施)和生存然后繁荣(IMG 做出的调整)。呈现了一个将这些概念构建在一起的论证的概念模型。
这项基于大量不同定性研究的元人种学研究首次全面描述了 IMG 在移民前后所面临的经历和挑战。我们的研究结果应该被用来指导旨在支持 IMG 并满足 GMC 目标的干预措施的制定。