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Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt

Egypt is enduring a significant shortage of physicians, despite the annual graduation of approximately 10,000 medical students from its 27 medical schools. In 2016, the physician density was alarmingly low, with only one doctor per 12,285 people. This shortage is exacerbated by a physicians’ brain d...

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Main Author: ElBeheiry, Mennatallah
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author ElBeheiry, Mennatallah
author_browse ElBeheiry, Mennatallah
author_facet ElBeheiry, Mennatallah
author_sort ElBeheiry, Mennatallah
collection Thesis
description Egypt is enduring a significant shortage of physicians, despite the annual graduation of approximately 10,000 medical students from its 27 medical schools. In 2016, the physician density was alarmingly low, with only one doctor per 12,285 people. This shortage is exacerbated by a physicians’ brain drain, as Egypt is a leading exporter of physicians to countries like the United Kingdom and Australia. As of 2020, the Egyptian Medical Syndicate reported 212,835 registered physicians, yet 56 percent of them work abroad, and only about 62,000 are actively employed in public hospitals, serving a population of over 110 million. The government’s efforts to address this shortage by increasing medical school admissions and expanding the number of medical schools are unlikely to be effective without deeper reforms. Additionally, as Egypt rolls out its Universal Health Insurance program, expected to be fully implemented by 2032, there is a pressing need for clear policies on the recruitment and retention of physicians to ensure the success of this initiative. Through employing an exploratory study that adopts a mixed methods approach, this study examines why and how the physicians’ brain drain phenomenon occurs. Theories and factors that affect the physicians' decision to migrate are explored to understand what pushes the Egyptian physicians out of Egypt, and what pulls them to their developed high-income country of interest. The study shows that poor healthcare facilities, unfavorable working conditions, low-quality training and limited educational opportunities, low remuneration, sociopolitical and economic issues in Egypt are the main factors that push Egyptian physicians out of Egypt. On the other hand, high-quality training and educational opportunities, well-developed health system, in addition to fair rewarding systems in the destination country are the main factors that pull Egyptian physicians to different high-income countries. Physicians’ brain drain is a rapidly expanding phenomena that negatively impacts the health system, the economy and society. This study can help policy makers understand why and how the physicians’ brain drain phenomenon occurs in Egypt, and hence make the right policy changes. Therefore, the study offers the following recommendations: updated nationwide database for human resources for health; reforming the medical training program; reforming the benefit package for physicians; reversing the brain drain through capitalizing on the returning physicians; and enabling future research to further investigate such expanding phenomenon.
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3465 Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt ElBeheiry, Mennatallah Egypt is enduring a significant shortage of physicians, despite the annual graduation of approximately 10,000 medical students from its 27 medical schools. In 2016, the physician density was alarmingly low, with only one doctor per 12,285 people. This shortage is exacerbated by a physicians’ brain drain, as Egypt is a leading exporter of physicians to countries like the United Kingdom and Australia. As of 2020, the Egyptian Medical Syndicate reported 212,835 registered physicians, yet 56 percent of them work abroad, and only about 62,000 are actively employed in public hospitals, serving a population of over 110 million. The government’s efforts to address this shortage by increasing medical school admissions and expanding the number of medical schools are unlikely to be effective without deeper reforms. Additionally, as Egypt rolls out its Universal Health Insurance program, expected to be fully implemented by 2032, there is a pressing need for clear policies on the recruitment and retention of physicians to ensure the success of this initiative. Through employing an exploratory study that adopts a mixed methods approach, this study examines why and how the physicians’ brain drain phenomenon occurs. Theories and factors that affect the physicians' decision to migrate are explored to understand what pushes the Egyptian physicians out of Egypt, and what pulls them to their developed high-income country of interest. The study shows that poor healthcare facilities, unfavorable working conditions, low-quality training and limited educational opportunities, low remuneration, sociopolitical and economic issues in Egypt are the main factors that push Egyptian physicians out of Egypt. On the other hand, high-quality training and educational opportunities, well-developed health system, in addition to fair rewarding systems in the destination country are the main factors that pull Egyptian physicians to different high-income countries. Physicians’ brain drain is a rapidly expanding phenomena that negatively impacts the health system, the economy and society. This study can help policy makers understand why and how the physicians’ brain drain phenomenon occurs in Egypt, and hence make the right policy changes. Therefore, the study offers the following recommendations: updated nationwide database for human resources for health; reforming the medical training program; reforming the benefit package for physicians; reversing the brain drain through capitalizing on the returning physicians; and enabling future research to further investigate such expanding phenomenon. 2025-01-31T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2420 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3465/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Physicians' Brain Drain Health Systems Human Resources for Health Egyptian Health System Physicians' Migration Health Policy Public Health Public Policy
spellingShingle Physicians' Brain Drain
Health Systems
Human Resources for Health
Egyptian Health System
Physicians' Migration
Health Policy
Public Health
Public Policy
ElBeheiry, Mennatallah
Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt
title Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt
title_full Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt
title_fullStr Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt
title_short Determinants of Physicians' Brain Drain in Egypt
title_sort determinants of physicians brain drain in egypt
topic Physicians' Brain Drain
Health Systems
Human Resources for Health
Egyptian Health System
Physicians' Migration
Health Policy
Public Health
Public Policy
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2420
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3465/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf
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