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The Migrant Health Guide

The Migrant Health Guide

An online resource for primary care practitioners Karen Wagner Travel and Migrant Health Section, Health Protection Agency


New multilingual guide seeks to tackle UK migrant worker exploitation

An online guide to help combat the exploitation of migrant workers, so that everyone is treated fairly, has been launched by the Trades Union Congress (TUC), with European support. The guide, Working in the UK, is available in 13 languages, including Polish, Bulgarian and Romanian.
Working in the UK provides workers with information and guidance on crucial issues such as pay, employment contracts, working hours, sick pay, and health and safety. It also explains how trade unions help workers deal with mistreatment, such as bogus self-employment or non-payment of the minimum wage, and bargain for better pay and conditions. TUC General Secretary Frances O’Grady said: “Unscrupulous employers have taken advantage of the fact that migrant workers are often unaware of their employment rights. “Migrant workers are regularly forced to accept appalling working conditions, low wages and a complete absence of rights. The issue of migrants undercutting existing workers has been exploited by some politicians to win support for anti-immigrant policies that only increase social tension and do nothing to clamp down on bad bosses and improve conditions for all workers.


Brain drain: Migrants are the lifeblood of the NHS, it's time the UK paid for them

Globally, universal health coverage – access to quality health services without the risk of financial hardship – is now firmly in the spotlight. Listed as a priority by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and even the World Bank, it also appears prominently in the post-2015 framework. This is an exciting moment for those of us who work towards the realisation of Health for All, and in particular for all those who are are currently denied healthcare.
But the realisation of the dream requires strong health systems, and strong health systems require health workers. Yet the WHO predicts that the current global shortage of 7.2 million health workers will increase to 12.9 million by 2035, with the poorest countries bearing the brunt of those shortages.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2015/jan/06/migrants-nhs-compensation-global-health-brain-drain

‘Inequality has become a challenge to us as moral beings’

Britain is beset by a crisis of purpose. We don’t know who we are any longer, where we are going or even if there is a “we”. The country is so passionately attached to past glories because there are so few to celebrate in the present. The crisis is compounded since we have been told for 30 years that the route to universal wellbeing is to abandon the expense of justice and equity and so allow the judgments of the market to go unobstructed. Private decisions in markets supposedly are morally and economically better than any public or collective action. As a result the sense of the “we” that binds a society together and gives us reason to belong is being lost. We take refuge in looking after number one, because there is no sense in, nor reason for, doing anything else.


Migrants to face NHS emergency care charges in England

They include extended prescription fees, the introduction of charges for some emergency care and higher rates for optical and dental services.
However, GP and nurse consultations will remain free, and nobody will be turned away in an emergency.
Ministers say they are keen to clamp down on any abuse of the system, but doctors' leaders have voiced concerns.
The government had considered charging for GP consultations, but decided that easy initial access was important to prevent risks to public health such as HIV, TB and sexually transmitted infections. Other types of primary care services that are being considered for charging include minor surgery that is carried out by a GP and physiotherapy that has been referred through a GP.


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