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Interventions for health workforce retention in rural and remote areas: a systematic review.

Deborah Jane RussellSupriya MathewMichelle FittsZania LiddleLorna Murakami-GoldNarelle CampbellMark RamjanYuejen ZhaoSonia HinesJohn S HumphreysJohn Wakerman
Published in: Human resources for health (2021)
Educational interventions such as preferential selection of rural students and distributed training in rural areas are associated with increased rural retention of health professionals. Strongly coercive interventions are associated with comparatively lower rural retention than interventions that involve less coercion. Policy makers seeking rural retention in the medium and longer term would be prudent to strengthen rural training pathways and limit the use of strongly coercive interventions.
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