Department of Economics, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Health Econ. 2011 Feb;20(2):196-211. doi: 10.1002/hec.1581.
The geographical imbalance of the health workforce in Tanzania represents a serious problem when it comes to delivering crucial health services to a large share of the population. This study provides new quantitative information about how to make jobs in rural areas more attractive to newly educated clinical officers (COs). A unique data set stemming from a discrete choice experiment with CO finalists in Tanzania is applied. The results show that offering continuing education after a certain period of service is one of the most powerful recruitment instruments the authorities have available. Increased salaries and hardship allowances will also substantially increase recruitment in rural areas. Offers of decent housing and good infrastructure, including the provision of equipment, will increase recruitment to rural remote areas but not as much as higher wages and offers of education. Women are less responsive to pecuniary incentives and are more concerned with factors that directly allow them to do a good job, while those with parents living in a remote rural area are generally less responsive to the proposed policies. When the willingness to help other people is a strong motivating force, policies that improve the conditions for helping people appear particularly effective.
坦桑尼亚的卫生人力在地理上分布不均,这给向大量人口提供关键卫生服务带来了严重问题。本研究就如何使农村地区的工作对新培养的临床医生更具吸引力提供了新的量化信息。研究应用了源自坦桑尼亚临床医生决赛选手的离散选择实验的独特数据集。结果表明,在一定服务期限后提供继续教育是当局可用的最有力的招聘手段之一。增加工资和艰苦津贴也将大大增加农村地区的招聘。提供体面的住房和良好的基础设施,包括设备的提供,将增加对农村偏远地区的招聘,但不如提高工资和提供教育的效果大。女性对金钱激励的反应较小,而更关心那些直接允许她们做好工作的因素,而那些父母居住在偏远农村地区的人对拟议政策的反应通常较小。当帮助他人的意愿成为强大的动力时,改善帮助他人条件的政策似乎特别有效。