Nursing policy and practice in Mongolia: Issues and the way forward.
Baigalmaa DovdonClaire Su-Yeon ParkNigel McCarleyPublished in: International nursing review (2022)
Global inequality exists in the availability of a nursing workforce, supported evidentially by the ratio, in low-income countries, of only 9.1 nurses per 10 000 people versus 107.7 nurses per 10 000 people in high-income countries. Mongolia is no exception with 42.14 nurses per 10 000 people and a nursing shortage severe enough to endanger patient safety and well-being. This paper details both a policy analysis and contextually well-designed recommendations to strengthen Mongolia's nursing science and practice systems. Obstacles that significantly affect the successful development of nursing and midwifery professions in Mongolia include (1) a lack of strategic planning and regulation; (2) low status of nurses and midwives; (3) absence of professional representation for nurses and midwives; and (4) a dearth of strategic programs for postgraduate training of nurses and midwives. The suggested recommendations include the appointment of a chief nursing office within the government and a cohort of nurse leaders to work to establish a nursing and midwifery board as an independent, professional regulatory body in Mongolia to develop and implement standards to ensure best practice, higher standards of nurse education, and regulate the profession.