Dovlo Delanyo
Hum Resour Health. 2005 Aug 10;3:6. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-3-6.
Sub-Saharan Africa faces a human resources crisis in the health sector. Over the past two decades its population has increased substantially, with a significant rise in the disease burden due to HIV/AIDS and recurrent communicable diseases and an increased incidence of noncommunicable diseases. This increased demand for health services is met with a rather low supply of health workers, but this notwithstanding, sub-Saharan African countries also experience significant wastage of their human resources stock.
This paper is a desk review to illustrate suggestions that the way human resources for health (HRH) are trained and deployed in Africa does not enhance productivity and that countries are unable to realize the full potential expected from the working life of their health workers. The paper suggests data types for use in measuring various forms of "wastage".
"Direct" wastage--or avoidable increases in loss of staff through factors such as emigration and death--is on the rise, perhaps as a result of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. "Indirect" wastage--which is the result of losses in output and productivity from health professionals' misapplied skills, absenteeism, poor support and lack of supervision--is also common. HIV/AIDS represents a special cause of wastage in Africa. Deaths of health workers, fear of infection, burnout, absenteeism, heavy workloads and stress affect productivity.
The paper reviews strategies that have been proposed and/or implemented. It suggests areas needing further attention, including: developing and using indicators for monitoring and managing wastage; enhancing motivation and morale of health workers; protecting and valuing the health worker with enhanced occupational safety and welfare systems; and establishing the moral leadership to effectively tackle HIV/AIDS and the brain drain.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区面临卫生部门人力资源危机。在过去二十年里,该地区人口大幅增长,因艾滋病毒/艾滋病和反复出现的传染病导致的疾病负担显著增加,非传染性疾病发病率也有所上升。对卫生服务的这种需求增加,但卫生工作者的供应却相当低,尽管如此,撒哈拉以南非洲国家的人力资源存量也存在大量浪费。
本文是一项案头综述,旨在说明有关非洲卫生人力资源(HRH)的培训和部署方式无法提高生产力,且各国无法充分实现其卫生工作者职业生涯预期全部潜力的建议。本文提出了用于衡量各种形式“浪费”的数据类型。
“直接”浪费——即因移民和死亡等因素导致的人员流失可避免增加——正在上升,这可能是艾滋病毒/艾滋病疫情造成的。“间接”浪费——即卫生专业人员技能应用不当、旷工、支持不足和缺乏监督导致的产出和生产力损失——也很常见。艾滋病毒/艾滋病是非洲浪费的一个特殊原因。卫生工作者的死亡、对感染的恐惧、职业倦怠、旷工、繁重的工作量和压力都会影响生产力。
本文回顾了已提出和/或实施的战略。它指出了需要进一步关注的领域,包括:制定和使用监测和管理浪费的指标;提高卫生工作者的积极性和士气;通过加强职业安全和福利系统来保护和重视卫生工作者;以及建立道德领导力以有效应对艾滋病毒/艾滋病和人才外流问题。