Natives as international medical graduates: A nationwide analysis in Taiwan

Int J Health Plann Manage. 2019 Jan;34(1):e291-e300. doi: 10.1002/hpm.2647. Epub 2018 Sep 11.

Abstract

Introduction: International medical graduates (IMGs) play an important role in many Western countries because of globalization and physician shortages. While the IMGs investigated in most studies were immigrants, few studies have considered the situation in which people native to a given country have studied medicine abroad and then returned to practice in their home country. To illustrate that situation, our study aimed to investigate practicing IMGs in Taiwan by comparing practicing physicians' nationalities to the countries in which the medical schools the IMGs graduated from are located.

Methods: Data were obtained from the annual official statistics released by the Taiwan Medical Association from 1998 to 2017.

Results: The number of practicing IMGs in Taiwan increased from 834 (3.1% of 26,991 physicians) in 1998 to 1,733 (3.7% of 46,452) in 2017. Their medical schools were distributed across 37 countries, with graduates of schools in the Philippines (n = 550), Poland (n = 420), and Myanmar (n = 364) accounting for 77.0% of all practicing IMGs in 2017. However, only 29, 0, and 253 physicians were themselves Filipinos, Polish, and Myanmarese, respectively.

Conclusion: Most of the practicing IMGs in Taiwan are native Taiwanese. The real impact of IMGs in health policy-making and the existing quota system of admissions to medical schools thus deserve further investigations.

Keywords: Taiwan; international medical graduate; medical school; nationality; physician.

MeSH terms

  • Databases, Factual
  • Developing Countries*
  • Foreign Medical Graduates / supply & distribution*
  • Foreign Medical Graduates / trends*
  • Humans
  • Taiwan