Davies Julie, Yarrow Emily, Callaghan Steven
Brunel Business School, Brunel University of London, Uxbridge, United Kingdom.
Business School, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
Front Public Health. 2025 Aug 15;13:1569440. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1569440. eCollection 2025.
Nurses represent the backbone of global healthcare systems where women typically deliver care and men lead. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) highly relies on foreign female nurses despite Saudisation policies designed to localize its workforce. Yet, in the context of an ambitious 2016-30 national health transformation program to modernize public health in a high-income and rapidly developing country, intersectional inequalities persist for migrant and local nurses in KSA. There are challenges in the specialisms of palliative and end-of-life care where there is a weak public and professional understanding of caring for people with life-limiting diseases and a lack of public discourse about death and dying. In this context, we ask which social determinants of health (SDOH) might be improved for female nurses in KSA to support SDOH improvements in the general population.
Based on a narrative literature review of 36 studies using Cochrane, EBSCO, PubMed, and Web of Science databases, we highlight the social determinants of health and wellbeing for both migrant nurses in PC and general population health.
Four key themes emerged from the literature review related to equity, ability, compassionate support, and meaning in the workplace. We illustrate that key SDOH for female nurses in KSA include inadequate housing, labor market fragmentation; gender, pay, religious, language and racial discrimination against nurses from low and middle-income countries with a general lack of understanding about PC. In turn, we explore these factors within four main themes: equity; ability; compassionate support; and meaningful work. Workforce shortages can result in working shifts and overtime with a lack of flexible working, which in turn cause stress, burnout, precarity, low job satisfaction and high turnover. We identify gaps between national policy ambitions for modernization and everyday practices caring for the Saudi nursing workforce.
Our review is novel in exploring the social determinants of health in the healthcare workforce linked to social determinants such as housing, income, job insecurity and working life conditions, living conditions, social inclusion and norms and socioeconomic position. It contributes to our understanding of how patriarchal cultures shape institutional and subjective forms of inequality in stark contrast to the national rhetoric of female empowerment. We propose three policy recommendations to improve PC nurses' SDOH and, in turn SDOH for the general population: (i) gender and race pay equity, (ii) human resource for workforce health and education policies using telehealth, and (iii) professional and public communication campaigns to increase respect for nurses and understanding the benefits of PC nursing as a career and as a service.
护士是全球医疗体系的中坚力量,在这一体系中,女性通常提供护理服务,男性则担任领导职务。沙特阿拉伯王国(KSA)高度依赖外国女护士,尽管该国制定了沙特化政策以实现劳动力本地化。然而,在一项雄心勃勃的2016 - 2030年国家卫生转型计划的背景下,该计划旨在使一个高收入且快速发展的国家的公共卫生实现现代化,但沙特阿拉伯的移民护士和本地护士仍然存在交叉不平等现象。在姑息治疗和临终关怀专业领域存在挑战,公众和专业人士对照顾患有危及生命疾病的患者缺乏了解,并且缺乏关于死亡和临终的公开讨论。在此背景下,我们探讨哪些健康的社会决定因素(SDOH)可能得到改善,以支持沙特阿拉伯女护士的健康,并进而改善普通人群的健康的社会决定因素。
基于对使用Cochrane、EBSCO、PubMed和Web of Science数据库的36项研究的叙述性文献综述,我们突出了姑息治疗(PC)中移民护士以及普通人群健康的健康和幸福的社会决定因素。
文献综述中出现了四个与公平、能力、同情支持和工作场所意义相关的关键主题。我们表明,沙特阿拉伯女护士的关键健康的社会决定因素包括住房不足、劳动力市场分散;对来自低收入和中等收入国家的护士存在性别、薪酬、宗教、语言和种族歧视,并且普遍对姑息治疗缺乏了解。相应地,我们在四个主要主题中探讨这些因素:公平;能力;同情支持;以及有意义的工作。劳动力短缺可能导致轮班工作和加班,且缺乏灵活的工作安排,这反过来会导致压力、倦怠、不稳定、工作满意度低和高离职率。我们发现国家现代化政策抱负与照顾沙特护士劳动力的日常实践之间存在差距。
我们的综述在探索与住房、收入、工作不安全感和工作生活条件、生活条件、社会包容与规范以及社会经济地位等社会决定因素相关的医疗劳动力健康的社会决定因素方面具有创新性。它有助于我们理解父权文化如何塑造制度性和主观性的不平等形式,这与国家关于女性赋权的言辞形成鲜明对比。我们提出三项政策建议,以改善姑息治疗护士的健康的社会决定因素,进而改善普通人群的健康的社会决定因素:(i)性别和种族薪酬公平,(ii)利用远程医疗制定劳动力健康和教育政策的人力资源,以及(iii)开展专业和公众宣传活动,以增加对护士的尊重,并理解姑息治疗护理作为一种职业和服务的益处。