Abstract

Migrants comprise a significant proportion of health workforces that have long been recognised as being at high risk of experiencing adverse outcomes from contracting Covid-19. However, there is a paucity of high-quality research data on the risks of such outcomes faced by migrant health workers compared with non-migrant ones. This paper explores the available data around Covid-19 deaths, health workers, and migration and develops a methodology to estimate how many migrant health workers died due to Covid-19. It presents preliminary assessments of the numbers of such workers based on statistical data from four trial countries chosen for their differences in terms of proportions of foreign-born health workers and development contexts – India, Mexico, Nigeria and the UK. We identify the age-sex standardised approach as the best-available one for this enumerative task. However, the paper identifies the lack of robust data needed to confidently quantify the relative differences in risk of death faced by migrant health workers compared with their non-migrant colleagues. We concur with the WHO’s advocacy of standardised measurement and reporting of Covid-19 impacts, and, on the basis of this research, extend it to recommend: the use of standard country codes, age breaks and formats across global datasets; improved data on the health workforce to enable disaggregation by sex, age, ethnicity, occupation, migration status, country of origin and by public/private health care delivery; and significantly improved data systems with greater capacity for collecting and analysing disaggregated data. Such improvements will go a long way to redressing the near-invisibility of migrant health workers (and migrants more generally) in Covid-19 impact studies and help improve working conditions of the health workforce.

Cite as

Tipping, S., Murphy, V., Yeates, N., Ismail, N., Montoro, C. & Ismail, G. 2022, Migrant Health Worker Deaths During Covid-19: a Methodological Exploration and Initial Estimates, The Open University. Available at: https://doi.org/10.21954/OU.RO.00014B4B

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Last updated: 08 July 2024
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