A time-to-practice metric for refugee clinician integration in receiving health systems: England as a worked example
摘要
Receiving health systems cannot improve refugee clinician integration pathways if no actor is responsible for the denominator, milestones, or stage-specific delays. England is a useful worked example. Published UK initiatives show that already-resident refugee and asylum-seeking doctors can reach NHS employment, supervised placements and professional registration, but they use different denominators, endpoints and follow-up conventions. They demonstrate feasibility without yielding a pathway metric that system-level purchasers, funders or regulators can compare, fund or improve. A minimum time-to-practice (TTP) specification would separate two clocks. A population or pre-pathway clock would record earlier dates, such as arrival, asylum-claim lodgement, first contact or first documentation of professional background, to show upstream delay and attrition. The pathway TTP clock would begin at pathway registration, when a minimum dataset is complete, a named pathway owner can act, and the case enters the reporting denominator. Two auditable milestones would then be measured from registration: TTP-1, the verified start of the first qualifying paid supervised placement; and TTP-2, practice-enabling, profession-equivalent registration. Work-eligibility status, documentation completeness, years out of practice and route complexity should be recorded to interpret variation rather than to exclude people from the denominator. TTP is not a measure of competence, programme effectiveness or speed alone. Its purpose is workforce governance: to define the denominator, milestones, safeguards and funding conditions needed to compare and improve a poorly observed route back into practice, while remaining distinct from active overseas recruitment.