Influence of social media and the digital environment on international migration of health workforce from low- and middle-income countries post COVID-19 pandemic: a scoping review protocol
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BMJ Open
Abstract
Introduction Migration of the health workforce from
low- and middle-income countries (LMCIs) is increasingly
becoming a phenomenon of interest within migration
governance systems. The COVID-19 pandemic aggravated
health workforce shortages that have created job
opportunities in high-income countries such as the USA,
UK, Canada and Germany among others. Conditions of
service in LMCIs are unattractive, leading to the search for
better opportunities. The digital environment is becoming
one of the facilitators of migration intentions due to the
activities of recruitment agencies and the search for
job opportunities on the World Wide Web. The digital
environment creates opportunities for migration but
also poses a security threat, economic loss and a brain
drain to departure countries. However, there is a paucity
of evidence on how the proliferation of advertisements
on health workforce recruitment within social media,
unsolicited emails and activities of recruitment agencies
in the digital environment influence the migration of
the health workforce and the implications of migration
governance.
Method and analysis This scoping review protocol
describes a comprehensive systematic extraction and
examination of existing literature to map key concepts
and identify previous literature, noting the gaps in how
social media and the digital environment are influencing
the migration of the health workforce. We lean on Arksey
and O'Malley’s scoping framework in developing this
protocol. This involves the following: identifying research
questions, searching for the literature, selecting articles or
studies, charting the data and organising and reporting the
outcome of the review. The review question is informed
by the population, concept and context framework, which
details the population as the health workforce (doctors,
nurses, midwives and pharmacists), the key concepts as
migration, social media and digital environment, and the
context as LMICs. The search strategy was developed
with the assistance of an experienced librarian who will
work with the team to conduct a Peer Review of Electronic
Search Strategies to evaluate titles, abstracts and full-text articles for inclusion from databases such as Scopus,
PubMed, MEDLINE and Google Scholar. Additionally, we
will search grey literature sources including online news
media, social media platforms (Facebook, Instagram and
Twitter), web pages of WHO, UN and migration-related
agencies, and interfaces like EBSCO host. Two members
of the team will screen titles and abstracts, and all team
members will screen full text for data extraction. Data
from grey sources will be converted to transcripts, coded
and grouped into themes and subthemes consistent with
thematic analysis strategies. All authors will be involved
in the synthesis of the data. We intend to follow Preferred
Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews guidelines in
reporting the outcome of peer-review sources.
Ethics and dissemination This is a scoping review
protocol that addresses a subject of interest that poses
no risk to individuals or groups. All the information will
be retrieved from open sources only. The protocol was
registered with the Open Science Framework registry (
osf.oi/zan3q) to serve as an audit trail. Reports from the
review will be published in peer-reviewed journals and
presented at conferences.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Dzansi G, Abdul Mumim A, Menkah W, et al. Influence of social media and the digital environment on international migration of health workforce from low- and middle-income countries post COVID-19 pandemic: a scoping review protocol. BMJ Open 2024;14:e087213. doi:10.1136/ bmjopen-2024-087213
