Kinfu Yohannes, Dal Poz Mario R, Mercer Hugo, Evans David B
School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
Bull World Health Organ. 2009 Mar;87(3):225-30. doi: 10.2471/blt.08.051599.
To estimate systematically the inflow and outflow of health workers in Africa and examine whether current levels of pre-service training in the region suffice to address this serious problem, taking into account population increases and attrition of health workers due to premature death, retirement, resignation and dismissal.
Data on the current numbers and types of health workers and outputs from training programmes are from the 2005 WHO health workforce and training institutions' surveys. Supplementary information on population estimates and mortality is from the United Nations Population Division and WHO databases, respectively, and information on worker attrition was obtained from the published literature. Because of shortages of data in some settings, the study was restricted to 12 countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
Our results suggest that the health workforce shortage in Africa is even more critical than previously estimated. In 10 of the 12 countries studied, current pre-service training is insufficient to maintain the existing density of health workers once all causes of attrition are taken into account. Even if attrition were limited to involuntary factors such as premature mortality, with current workforce training patterns it would take 36 years for physicians and 29 years for nurses and midwives to reach WHO's recent target of 2.28 professionals per 1000 population for the countries taken as a whole--and some countries would never reach it.
Pre-service training needs to be expanded as well as combined with other measures to increase health worker inflow and reduce the rate of outflow.
系统评估非洲卫生工作者的流入和流出情况,并考虑到人口增长以及因过早死亡、退休、辞职和辞退导致的卫生工作者流失,研究该地区当前的岗前培训水平是否足以解决这一严重问题。
关于卫生工作者当前数量和类型的数据以及培训项目的产出数据来自2005年世界卫生组织卫生人力和培训机构调查。关于人口估计数和死亡率的补充信息分别来自联合国人口司和世界卫生组织数据库,关于工作者流失的信息则从已发表的文献中获取。由于某些地区数据不足,该研究仅限于撒哈拉以南非洲的12个国家。
我们的结果表明,非洲的卫生人力短缺问题比之前估计的更为严重。在所研究的12个国家中的10个国家,一旦将所有流失原因考虑在内,当前的岗前培训不足以维持现有的卫生工作者密度。即使流失仅限于诸如过早死亡等非自愿因素,按照当前的劳动力培训模式,对于医生而言要达到世界卫生组织近期为这些国家设定的每千人口2.28名专业人员的目标需要36年,对于护士和助产士而言则需要29年——而且一些国家永远无法达到这一目标。
岗前培训需要扩大,并与其他措施相结合,以增加卫生工作者的流入并降低流出率。