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Health system weaknesses mean that death rates are rising and life expectancy is falling in the poorest countries, despite the global health advances of recent years. Health workers hold the key to tackling these challenges. But urgent action is needed to improve the supply, capacity and distribution of the global health workforce.
A report by the Joint Learning Initiative, an enterprise involving over 100 global health leaders, estimates that there are 100 million people working in health care worldwide. This includes 24 million doctors, nurses and midwives, plus many more informal, traditional, community and allied workers. However, there is still a global shortage of at least four million workers. Health workers are overburdened as a result and face additional challenges from three major sources:
Countries can accelerate health gains by investing in and managing their health workforce. This includes recruiting, training and retaining health professionals to produce a labour force that more closely meets their populations’ needs and redistributing health workers to rural and marginal communities. Improving work environments through better resource management and incentive systems would also boost health worker morale and performance.
The researchers conclude that effective workforce strategies can boost health service delivery, even under difficult circumstances. Recommendations for policymakers include:
Source(s):
id21 insights health #7, August 2005, Responding to the health workforce
crisis Full document.
'Human resources for health: overcoming the crisis', Report of Joint
Learning Initiative, Global Equity Initiative, 2004
Funded by: Atlantic Philanthropies, USA; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; UK Department for International Development (DFID); Swedish Sida; Rockefeller Foundation; Canadian International Development Agency; Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ); Global Equity Initiative, Harvard University, USA; JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc., USA; Open Society Institute; World Health Organisation; World Bank
id21 Research Highlight: 12 July 2005
Further Information:
Piya Hanvoravongchai
Global Equity Initiative
Harvard University
1033 Massachusetts Ave
Cambridge
MA 02138
USA
Tel:
+1 617 998 0167
Fax:
+1 617 998 0173
Contact the contributor: phanvora@hsph.harvard.edu
Joint Learning Initiative, Global Health Trust
Other related links:
'Responding to the health workforce crisis'
'Stopping the migration of Ghana's health workers'
'Filling the gaps: introducing substitute health workers in Africa'
'The crucial contribution of overseas volunteers'
'Committing donors to building health workforces'
'Finding the answers to Chad's health workforce crisis'
Eldis/HSRC human resources for health dossier