Africa Centre for Health and Population Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Mtubatuba, South Africa.
Hum Resour Health. 2009 Jun 26;7:52. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-7-52.
In many countries worldwide, health worker shortages are one of the main constraints in achieving population health goals. Financial-incentive programmes for return of service, whereby participants receive payments in return for a commitment to practise for a period of time in a medically underserved area, can alleviate local and regional health worker shortages through a number of mechanisms. First, they can redirect the flow of those health workers who would have been educated without financial incentives from well-served to underserved areas. Second, they can add health workers to the pool of workers who would have been educated without financial incentives and place them in underserved areas. Third, financial-incentive programmes may improve the retention in underserved areas of those health workers who participate in a programme, but who would have worked in an underserved area without any financial incentives. Fourth, the programmes may increase the retention of all health workers in underserved areas by reducing the strength of some of the reasons why health workers leave such areas, including social isolation, lack of contact with colleagues, lack of support from medical specialists and heavy workload. We draw on studies of financial-incentive programmes and other initiatives with similar objectives to discuss seven management functions that are essential for the long-term success of financial-incentive programmes: financing (programmes may benefit from innovative donor financing schemes, such as endowment funds, international financing facilities or compensation payments); promotion (programmes should use tested communication channels in order to reach secondary school graduates and health workers); selection (programmes may use selection criteria to ensure programme success and to achieve supplementary policy goals); placement (programmes should match participants to areas in order to maximize participant satisfaction and retention); support (programmes should prepare participants for the time in an underserved area, stay in close contact with participants throughout the different phases of enrolment and help participants by assigning them mentors, establishing peer support systems or financing education courses relevant to work in underserved areas); enforcement (programmes may use community-based monitoring or outsource enforcement to existing institutions); and evaluation (in order to broaden the evidence on the effectiveness of financial incentives in increasing the health workforce in underserved areas, programmes in developing countries should evaluate their performance; in order to improve the strength of the evidence on the effectiveness of financial incentives, controlled experiments should be conducted where feasible). In comparison to other interventions to increase the supply of health workers to medically underserved areas, financial-incentive programmes have advantages--unlike initiatives using non-financial incentives, they establish legally enforceable commitments to work in underserved areas and, unlike compulsory service policies, they will not be opposed by health workers--as well as disadvantages--unlike initiatives using non-financial incentives, they may not improve the working and living conditions in underserved areas (which are important determinants of health workers' long-term retention) and, unlike compulsory service policies, they cannot guarantee that they will supply health workers to underserved areas who would not have worked in such areas without financial incentives. Financial incentives, non-financial incentives, and compulsory service are not mutually exclusive and may positively affect each other's performance.
在世界上许多国家,卫生工作者短缺是实现人口健康目标的主要制约因素之一。通过经济激励计划,让参与者在承诺在医疗资源不足地区行医一段时间后获得报酬,可以通过多种机制来缓解当地和地区的卫生工作者短缺问题。首先,它们可以将原本没有经济激励就不会接受教育的卫生工作者的流向从服务良好的地区转移到医疗资源不足的地区。其次,它们可以将原本没有经济激励就不会接受教育的卫生工作者纳入劳动力队伍,并将他们安排在医疗资源不足的地区。第三,经济激励计划可能会提高参与该计划的卫生工作者在服务不足地区的留用率,但如果没有经济激励,他们本会在服务不足的地区工作。第四,该计划可能会通过减少卫生工作者离开服务不足地区的一些原因的强度,从而提高所有服务不足地区卫生工作者的留用率,这些原因包括社会孤立、与同事缺乏联系、缺乏医学专家的支持和工作量过大。我们借鉴经济激励计划和其他具有类似目标的举措的研究,讨论了长期成功实施经济激励计划所必需的七个管理职能:供资(计划可以从创新的捐助者供资计划中受益,如捐赠基金、国际供资机制或补偿支付);推广(计划应利用经过测试的沟通渠道,以接触到中学毕业生和卫生工作者);选拔(计划可以使用选拔标准,以确保计划的成功,并实现补充政策目标);安置(计划应将参与者与地区相匹配,以最大限度地提高参与者的满意度和留用率);支持(计划应为参与者在服务不足地区的时间做好准备,在整个入学不同阶段与参与者保持密切联系,并通过为他们分配导师、建立同行支持系统或资助与服务不足地区工作相关的教育课程来帮助他们);执法(计划可以利用基于社区的监测或将执法外包给现有机构);和评估(为了扩大有关通过经济激励措施增加服务不足地区卫生人力的有效性的证据,发展中国家的计划应评估其绩效;为了提高经济激励措施有效性的证据强度,在可行的情况下应进行对照试验)。与其他增加向医疗资源不足地区供应卫生工作者的干预措施相比,经济激励计划具有优势——与使用非经济激励措施的举措不同,它们确立了在服务不足地区工作的具有法律约束力的承诺,而且与义务兵役政策不同,它们不会遭到卫生工作者的反对——但也有劣势——与使用非经济激励措施的举措不同,它们可能不会改善服务不足地区的工作和生活条件(这是卫生工作者长期留用的重要决定因素),而且与义务兵役政策不同,它们不能保证向服务不足地区提供没有经济激励就不会在这些地区工作的卫生工作者。经济激励、非经济激励和义务兵役不是相互排斥的,它们可能会相互促进。