Wyss Kaspar
Swiss Centre for International Health, Swiss Tropical Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
Hum Resour Health. 2004 Jul 6;2(1):11. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-2-11.
For any wide-ranging effort to scale up health-related priority interventions, human resources for health (HRH) are likely to be a key to success. This study explores constraints related to human resources in the health sector for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in low-income countries. METHODS AND FRAMEWORK: The analysis drew on information from a variety of publicly-available sources and principally on data presented in published papers in peer-reviewed journals. For classifying HRH constraints an analytical framework was used that considers constraints at five levels: individual characteristics, the health service delivery level, the health sector level, training capacities and the sociopolitical and economic context of a country. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: At individual level, the decision to enter, remain and serve in the health sector workforce is influenced by a series of social, economic, cultural and gender-related determinants. For example, to cover the health needs of the poorest it is necessary to employ personnel with specific social, ethnic and cultural characteristics. At health-service level, the commitment of health staff is determined by a number of organizational and management factors. The workplace environment has a great impact not only on health worker performance, but also on the comprehensiveness and efficiency of health service delivery. At health-sector level, the use of monetary and nonmonetary incentives is of crucial importance for having the accurate skill mix at the appropriate place. Scaling up of priority interventions is likely to require significant investments in initial and continuous training. Given the lead time required to produce new health workers, such investments must occur in the early phases of scaling up. At the same time coherent national HRH policies are required for giving direction on HRH development and linking HRH into health-sector reform issues, the scaling-up of priority interventions, poverty reduction strategies, and training approaches. Multisectoral collaboration and the sociopolitical and economic context of a country determine health sector workforce development and potential emigration. CONCLUSIONS: Key determinants of success for achieving international development goals are closely related to human-resource development.
对于任何旨在扩大与健康相关的重点干预措施的广泛努力而言,卫生人力资源(HRH)很可能是成功的关键。本研究探讨了低收入国家卫生部门在实现千年发展目标(MDGs)方面与人力资源相关的制约因素。
分析借鉴了各种公开可用来源的信息,主要依据同行评审期刊上发表论文中呈现的数据。为了对卫生人力资源制约因素进行分类,使用了一个分析框架,该框架从五个层面考虑制约因素:个人特征、卫生服务提供层面、卫生部门层面、培训能力以及一个国家的社会政治和经济背景。
在个人层面,进入、留在卫生部门工作队伍并为之服务的决定受到一系列社会、经济、文化和与性别相关的决定因素的影响。例如,为了满足最贫困人口的健康需求,有必要雇佣具有特定社会、种族和文化特征的人员。在卫生服务层面,卫生工作人员的投入由一些组织和管理因素决定。工作场所环境不仅对卫生工作者的绩效有很大影响,而且对卫生服务提供的全面性和效率也有很大影响。在卫生部门层面,使用货币和非货币激励措施对于在适当的地方拥有准确的技能组合至关重要。扩大重点干预措施可能需要在初始培训和持续培训方面进行大量投资。鉴于培养新的卫生工作者需要一定的准备时间,此类投资必须在扩大规模的早期阶段进行。与此同时,需要连贯的国家卫生人力资源政策来指导卫生人力资源发展,并将卫生人力资源与卫生部门改革问题、重点干预措施的扩大规模、减贫战略以及培训方法联系起来。多部门合作以及一个国家的社会政治和经济背景决定了卫生部门劳动力的发展和潜在的移民情况。
实现国际发展目标成功的关键决定因素与人力资源开发密切相关。