The crisis of nursing staff shortages in Iran, driven by the migration of nurses, has once again come into focus following the release of official statistics by officials from the Iranian regime’s Ministry of Health. The published figures show that the trends of nurses leaving their jobs, retiring, and emigrating continue, while regime officials are warning about the consequences for the healthcare system. At a time when medical centers across the country face shortages of personnel, the migration of nurses has become one of the most significant challenges in the healthcare sector.
According to remarks by Abbas Ebadi, Deputy Minister for Nursing Affairs at the Iranian regime’s Ministry of Health, published on June 13 by the state-run IRNA news agency and the state-run Asr Iran news website, 1,800 nurses left their jobs during the past year. In addition, 800 nurses resigned and 380 nurses left the country. These figures, combined with the retirement of 1,600 nurses and 2,400 recorded cases of deferred nursing service obligations, present a troubling picture of the healthcare system’s workforce situation.
Nurses’ Migration and Growing Staff Shortages
The Deputy Minister for Nursing Affairs described staff shortages as the most significant challenge facing the sector. According to him, the shortage of nurses has contributed to burnout, job abandonment, and nurse migration. He emphasized that the low nurse-to-hospital-bed ratio, retirements, resignations, and an increase in unpaid leave have placed additional pressure on healthcare personnel.
The issue of nurses’ migration has been raised repeatedly in recent years by various institutions. Many nurses choose to leave the country due to difficult working conditions, professional pressures, and career limitations. This trend continues while healthcare centers face severe staffing shortages, and many hospital wards are operated through mandatory overtime and extensive workloads.
Ebadi stated that the departure of each nurse from the country results in an annual loss of approximately 40 billion rials. This figure includes educational costs and investments made in training specialized personnel who ultimately leave the country’s healthcare system due to migration.
Warning About the Security of the Healthcare System
One of the most significant aspects of the deputy minister’s remarks was his warning about threats to the security of the healthcare system. He stated that nursing shortages could lead to increased mortality rates, more medical and nursing errors, and higher healthcare costs for citizens.
The Health Ministry official emphasized that nursing is no longer merely a professional labor issue but has become a matter directly linked to the quality of healthcare services and public health security. He added that the decline in the number of active nurses places greater pressure on the remaining workforce and may negatively affect the quality of patient care.
In this context, the Ministry of Health announced that it received authorization to hire 12,000 nurses during the past year. However, healthcare experts believe that recruitment alone cannot solve existing problems, as the migration of experienced nurses continues simultaneously.
Changing the Approach to Workforce Management
In another part of his remarks, the Deputy Minister for Nursing Affairs stressed the need to change the approach toward nurses’ professional demands. He said that international experience shows nurse retention does not depend solely on financial factors and that professional, organizational, and social factors also play a decisive role.
Nevertheless, the release of official statistics on resignations, retirements, and nurse migration indicates that the workforce crisis in the healthcare sector remains one of the most significant challenges facing the country’s healthcare system. If this trend continues, it could place greater pressure on hospitals and medical centers and make access to healthcare services more difficult for citizens.
Official statistics published by the Ministry of Health indicate that nurses’ migration and the departure of skilled professionals from the healthcare system have reached a stage where even regime officials describe it as a threat to the security of the healthcare system. The continued staff shortages, occupational burnout, and loss of human capital from the country paint a picture of a deepening crisis whose consequences will directly affect patients and the quality of healthcare services.


