The number and share of foreign-trained doctors – and in some countries foreign-trained nurses – working in OECD countries has continued to rise over the past decade (OECD, 2019[1]). In 2019, about 18% of doctors on average across OECD countries had obtained at least their first medical degree in another country (Figure 8.23), up from 15% a decade earlier. For nurses, on average 6% had obtained a nursing degree in another country in 2019 (Figure 8.24). These developments occurred in parallel with a significant increase in the numbers of domestically trained medical and nursing graduates in nearly all OECD countries (see indicators “Medical graduates” and “Nursing graduates”), which indicates substantial demand for doctors and nurses.
In 2019, the share of foreign-trained doctors ranged from 2% or less in Turkey, Lithuania, Italy and Poland to around 40% in Norway, Ireland and New Zealand, and nearly 60% in Israel. In most OECD countries, the share of foreign-trained nurses is below 5%, but New Zealand and Switzerland have proportions around 25%, and Australia and the United Kingdom around 15‑20%. However, in some cases, foreign-trained doctors and nurses consist of people born in the country who studied abroad but have returned. In a number of countries (including Israel, Norway, Sweden and the United States), this share is large and growing, particularly for foreign-trained doctors. In 2019 in Israel, for example, nearly 50% of foreign-trained doctors and nurses were native.
The share of foreign-trained doctors in various OECD countries evolved between 2005 and 2019 (Figure 8.25). The share remained relatively stable in the United Kingdom, at about 30%, and in the United States, at about 25%, with the number of foreign-trained and domestically trained doctors increasing at a similar rate. However, a growing number of foreign-trained doctors in the United States are American citizens who obtained their first medical degree abroad: in 2017, one‑third of international medical graduates who obtained their certification to practise in the United States were American citizens, up from 17% in 2007 (OECD, 2019[12]).
In Europe, the share of foreign-trained doctors increased rapidly in Norway and Sweden. However, in Norway more than half of foreign-trained doctors are native, returning after studying abroad. In Sweden, the number of foreign-trained but native doctors has quadrupled since 2006, accounting for nearly one‑fifth of foreign-trained doctors in 2018.
In France and Germany, the number and share of foreign-trained doctors has also increased steadily over the past decade (with the share more than doubling from 5‑6% of all doctors in 2005 to 12‑13% in 2019).
The share of foreign-trained nurses has increased substantially since 2005 in Switzerland, New Zealand, Australia and the United Kingdom, although the share seems to have stabilised in recent years in Australia and Switzerland (Figure 8.26). In Switzerland, the increase has been driven mainly by the growing number of nurses trained in France and Germany, and to a lesser extent in Italy.
The Philippines has been the leading country of origin of foreign-trained nurses in many OECD countries, including New Zealand, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada. For many years, the Philippines has had a deliberate policy of training nurses to work in other countries. India has also been an important country of origin of foreign-trained nurses in many English-speaking OECD countries.
In Italy, the number of foreign-trained nurses increased sharply between 2007 and 2012, driven mainly by the arrival of nurses trained in Romania following its accession to the EU in 2007, but the number and share have started to decrease in recent years.