Abstract

Background‘Dual practice’, or multiple job holding, generally involves public sector-based health workers taking additional work in the private sector. This form of the practice is purported to help retain public health care workers in low and middle-income countries’ public sectors through additional wage incentives. There has been little conceptual or empirical development of the relationship between dual practice and retention.MethodsThis article helps begin to fill this gap, drawing on empirical evidence from a qualitative study focusing on South African specialists. Fifty-one repeat, in-depth interviews were carried out with 28 doctors (predominantly specialists) with more than one job, in one public and one private urban hospital.ResultsFindings suggest dual practice can impact both positively and negatively on specialists’ intention to stay in the public sector. This is through multiple conceptual channels including those previously identified in the literature such as dual practice acting as a ‘stepping stone’ to private practice by reducing migration costs. Dual practice can also lead specialists to re-evaluate how they compare public and private jobs, and to overworking which can expedite decisions on whether to stay in the public sector or leave. Numerous respondents undertook dual practice without official permission.ConclusionsThe idea that dual practice helps retain public specialists in South Africa may be overstated. Yet banning the practice may be ineffective, given many undertake it without permission in any case. Regulation should be better enforced to ensure dual practice is not abused. The conceptual framework developed in this article could form a basis for further qualitative and quantitative inquiry.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1478-4491-13-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThis article aims to help fill this gap by unpacking the retention impacts of dual practice in a specific Low or Middle-Income Country (LMIC) setting where the practice is very common

  • The idea that dual practice helps retain public specialists in South Africa may be overstated

  • This article aims to help fill this gap by unpacking the retention impacts of dual practice in a specific Low or Middle-Income Country (LMIC) setting where the practice is very common

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Summary

Objectives

This article aims to help fill this gap by unpacking the retention impacts of dual practice in a specific LMIC setting where the practice is very common

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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