Unraveling the "Greener Pastures" Concept: The Phenomenology of Internationally Educated Occupational Therapists.
Roi Charles PinedaBrenda Abad-PinlacDaryl Patrick Gamboa YaoFides Nadine Raya B ToribioStaffan JosephssonMichael Palapal SyPublished in: OTJR : occupation, participation and health (2023)
The Philippines is one of the major labor exporters for health care workers in the world and occupational therapists are the second most likely professionals behind nurses to work in "greener pastures" overseas. This phenomenological study describes the migration experiences of Philippine-trained occupational therapists working in high-income, Anglophone countries. Researchers conducted online interview for 15 participants who were previously/currently unemployed/underemployed. Following an inductive approach to qualitative data analysis, themes were drawn from the migrant therapists' lived experiences. Four themes describe the migration experiences of Filipino occupational therapists: (a) realities of being an occupational therapist in the Philippines, (b) contradictions faced by Filipino occupational therapists upon migration, (c) when the pastures overseas are not greener, and (d) when the pastures overseas are indeed greener. The study contributes to the labor migration discourse in occupational therapy and the critical examination of the idea of "greener pastures."