Segal Leonie, Bolton Tom
Health Economics and Policy Group, Division of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Aust New Zealand Health Policy. 2009 May 7;6:12. doi: 10.1186/1743-8462-6-12.
This article examines issues facing the future health care workforce in Australia in light of factors such as population ageing. It has been argued that population ageing in Australia is affecting the supply of health care professionals as the health workforce ages and at the same time increasing the demand for health care services and the health care workforce.However, the picture is not that simple. The health workforce market in Australia is influenced by a wide range of factors; on the demand side by increasing levels of income and wealth, emergence of new technologies, changing disease profiles, changing public health priorities and a focus on the prevention of chronic disease. While a strong correlation is observed between age and use of health care services (and thus health care workforce), this is mediated through illness, as typified by the consistent finding of higher health care costs in the months preceding death.On the supply side, the health workforce is highly influenced by policy drivers; both national policies (eg funded education and training places) and local policies (eg work place-based retention policies). Population ageing and ageing of the health workforce is not a dominant influence. In recent years, the Australian health care workforce has grown in excess of overall workforce growth, despite an ageing health workforce. We also note that current levels of workforce supply compare favourably with many OECD countries. The future of the health workforce will be shaped by a number of complex interacting factors.Market failure, a key feature of the market for health care services which is also observed in the health care labour market - means that imbalances between demand and supply can develop and persist, and suggests a role for health workforce planning to improve efficiency in the health services sector. Current approaches to health workforce planning, especially on the demand side, tend to be highly simplistic. These include historical allocation methods, such as the personnel-to-population ratios which are essentially circular in their rationale rather than evidence-based. This article highlights the importance of evidence-based demand modelling for those seeking to plan for the future Australian health care workforce. A model based on population health status and best practice protocols for health care is briefly outlined.
本文根据人口老龄化等因素,审视了澳大利亚未来医疗保健劳动力所面临的问题。有人认为,澳大利亚的人口老龄化正在影响医疗保健专业人员的供应,因为医疗劳动力队伍在老龄化,同时医疗保健服务和医疗保健劳动力的需求也在增加。然而,情况并非如此简单。澳大利亚的医疗劳动力市场受到多种因素的影响;在需求方面,受收入和财富水平提高、新技术的出现、疾病谱的变化、公共卫生重点的改变以及对慢性病预防的关注等因素影响。虽然在年龄与医疗保健服务使用(进而与医疗保健劳动力)之间观察到很强的相关性,但这是通过疾病来调节的,正如在死亡前几个月医疗保健成本持续较高这一一致发现所表明的那样。在供应方面,医疗劳动力受到政策驱动因素的高度影响;包括国家政策(如资助的教育和培训名额)和地方政策(如基于工作场所的留用政策)。人口老龄化和医疗劳动力的老龄化并不是主要影响因素。近年来,尽管医疗劳动力队伍在老龄化,但澳大利亚医疗保健劳动力的增长超过了总体劳动力的增长。我们还注意到,目前的劳动力供应水平与许多经合组织国家相比具有优势。医疗劳动力的未来将由一些复杂的相互作用因素塑造。市场失灵是医疗保健服务市场的一个关键特征,在医疗保健劳动力市场也存在——这意味着需求和供应之间的不平衡可能会出现并持续存在,并表明医疗劳动力规划在提高医疗服务部门效率方面可以发挥作用。目前的医疗劳动力规划方法,尤其是在需求方面,往往过于简单。这些方法包括历史分配方法,如人员与人口比率,其基本原理是循环的,而不是基于证据的。本文强调了基于证据的需求建模对于那些试图为澳大利亚未来医疗保健劳动力进行规划的人的重要性。简要概述了一个基于人口健康状况和医疗保健最佳实践方案的模型。