%0 Journal Article %T Brain Gains: a literature review of medical missions to low and middle-income countries %A Alexandra LC Martiniuk %A Mitra Manouchehrian %A Joel A Negin %A Anthony B Zwi %J BMC Health Services Research %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1472-6963-12-134 %X A literature review was conducted by searching Medline for articles published from 1985¨C2009 about medical missions to LMICs, revealing 2512 publications. Exclusion criteria such as receiving country and mission length were applied, leaving 230 relevant articles. A data extraction sheet was used to collect information, including sending/receiving countries and funding source.The majority of articles were descriptive and lacked contextual or theoretical analysis. Most missions were short-term (1£żday ¨C 1£żmonth). The most common sending countries were the U.S. and Canada. The top destination country was Honduras, while regionally Africa received the highest number of missions. Health care professionals typically responded to presenting health needs, ranging from primary care to surgical relief. Cleft lip/palate surgeries were the next most common type of care provided.Based on the articles reviewed, there is significant scope for improvement in mission planning, monitoring and evaluation as well as global and/or national policies regarding foreign medical missions. To promote optimum performance by mission staff, training in such areas as cross-cultural communication and contextual realities of mission sites should be provided. With the large number of missions conducted worldwide, efforts to ensure efficacy, harmonisation with existing government programming and transparency are needed. %K medical missions %K low- and middle-income countries %K volunteer %K human resources %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6963/12/134/abstract