Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Hum Resour Health. 2008 Dec 22;6:29. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-6-29.
Increased immunization coverage is an important step towards fulfilling the Millennium Development Goal of reducing childhood mortality. Recent cross-sectional and cross-national research has indicated that physician, nurse and midwife densities may positively influence immunization coverage. However, little is known about relationships between densities of human resources for health (HRH) and vaccination coverage within developing countries and over time. The present study examines HRH densities and coverage of the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) in Turkey during the period 2000 to 2006.
The study is based on provincial-level data on HRH densities, vaccination coverage and provincial socioeconomic and demographic characteristics published by the Turkish government. Panel data regression methodologies (random and fixed effects models) are used to analyse the data.
Three main findings emerge: (1) combined physician, nurse/midwife and health officer density is significantly associated with vaccination rates--independent of provincial female illiteracy, GDP per capita and land area--although the association was initially positive and turned negative over time; (2) HRH-vaccination rate relationships differ by cadre of health worker, with physician and health officers exhibiting significant relationships that mirror those for aggregate density, while nurse/midwife densities are not consistently significant; (3) HRH densities bear stronger relationships with vaccination coverage among more rural provinces, compared to those with higher population densities.
We find evidence of relationships between HRH densities and vaccination rates even at Turkey's relatively elevated levels of each. At the same time, variations in results between different empirical models suggest that this relationship is complex, affected by other factors that occurred during the study period, and warrants further investigation to verify our findings. We hypothesize that the introduction of certain health-sector policies governing terms of HRH employment affected incentives to provide vaccinations and therefore relationships between HRH densities and vaccination rates. National-level changes experienced during the study period--such as a severe financial crisis--may also have affected and/or been associated with the HRH-vaccination rate link. While our findings therefore suggest that the size of a health workforce may be associated with service provision at a relatively elevated level of development, they also indicate that focusing on per capita levels of HRH may be of limited value in understanding performance in service provision. In both Turkey and elsewhere, further investigation is needed to corroborate our results as well as gain deeper understanding into relationships between health worker densities and service provision.
提高免疫覆盖率是实现减少儿童死亡率的千年发展目标的重要一步。最近的横断面和跨国研究表明,医生、护士和助产士的密度可能会对免疫覆盖率产生积极影响。然而,人们对发展中国家在一段时间内人力资源与疫苗接种覆盖率之间的关系知之甚少。本研究调查了 2000 年至 2006 年期间土耳其人力资源(HRH)密度和扩大免疫规划(EPI)覆盖范围之间的关系。
本研究基于土耳其政府公布的省级人力资源密度、疫苗接种覆盖率以及省级社会经济和人口特征数据。使用面板数据回归方法(随机和固定效应模型)对数据进行分析。
主要有三个发现:(1)医生、护士/助产士和卫生官员的综合密度与疫苗接种率显著相关——独立于省级女性文盲率、人均国内生产总值和土地面积——尽管这种关联最初是积极的,但随着时间的推移而变为消极;(2)HRH-疫苗接种率关系因卫生工作者的职级而异,医生和卫生官员的关系与总密度的关系相似,而护士/助产士的密度则不总是显著相关;(3)与人口密度较高的省份相比,人力资源密度与农村省份的疫苗接种覆盖率之间的关系更强。
即使在土耳其相对较高的人力资源密度水平下,我们也发现了人力资源密度与疫苗接种率之间的关系。同时,不同实证模型之间的结果差异表明,这种关系很复杂,受到研究期间发生的其他因素的影响,需要进一步调查以验证我们的发现。我们假设,某些影响人力资源雇佣条件的卫生部门政策的引入影响了提供疫苗接种的激励,因此人力资源密度与疫苗接种率之间存在关联。研究期间经历的国家层面的变化,如严重的金融危机,也可能影响和/或与人力资源与疫苗接种率的联系有关。虽然我们的研究结果表明,卫生劳动力的规模可能与相对较高发展水平的服务提供有关,但它们也表明,关注人均人力资源水平在理解服务提供方面的价值有限。在土耳其和其他地方,都需要进一步调查来证实我们的结果,并深入了解卫生工作者密度与服务提供之间的关系。