Abstract
The purpose of this study was to collect primary data on the migration patterns of Bahamian nurses who had registered as nurses during the period 1994–2005. We used an established social network identification method developed by Delanyo Dovlo to determine whether (and to where) Bahamian nurses had migrated. We reviewed nursing registrants’ records from the Nursing Council of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas. We telephoned two nurses per cohort of registration and graduation year, asking the interviewee to identify the current location of colleagues registered in their same cohort. Between 1994 and 2005, a total of 18 out of 282 nurses were either confirmed or probably migrated (6%). Ninety-six per cent of those nurses registered during the study time frame were located during the exercise, partially because of an improvement on the Dovlo method – calling a nurse leader who could locate nursing classmates and colleagues beyond his or her own year of graduation. Nurse migration in the Bahamas appears lower than in surrounding countries, posing a research opportunity to investigate the causes for this positive deviation. Future studies employing this method should include interviews of nurse leaders who can confirm the location of a much wider range of people than can the average participant.
Acknowledgements
We appreciate the support and encouragement from the staff at the International Training and Education Center on Health (I-TECH) at the University of Washington and the Caribbean HIV/AIDS Regional Training (CHART) Initiative. We also appreciate the contribution of data by the Nursing Council of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas, and the helpfulness of the respondents to our survey. Anne Sales, of the Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, contributed to early drafts of this paper.