Exploring the Emigration Mechanisms of Nurses: A Qualitative Study from Türkiye
Özet
While there has been a shortage of nurses worldwide, especially in the last few decades,
due to aging, epidemiological transition, and population growth, this shortage has become
more evident with the COVID-19 pandemic. Developed countries, which were already
importing nurses from abroad before the pandemic, have made these policies aggressive
with the pandemic. While nurses in Türkiye were in an almost untouched position before
the pandemic, with the pandemic, they were noticed by developed countries and started
to look for a new path due to the negative factors in Türkiye.
This thesis investigated the mechanisms and motivations of nurse emigration, which has
emerged as a new highly skilled migration trend in Türkiye, and what manages this
migration. With a qualitative research design, snowball and quota sampling strategies
were used, and semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted. Thematic analysis
was used as analysis method. This study concludes that the biggest migration motivation
of nurses is the value mechanism, that migration is governed by neoliberalism and the
occupational network, and that nurse emigration is much more common than thought.