Institute for International Health and Development, Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, Scotland .
The World Bank, 1818 H Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20433, United States of America .
Bull World Health Organ. 2013 Nov 1;91(11):841-6. doi: 10.2471/BLT.13.118794.
Human resources for health have been recognized as essential to the development of responsive and effective health systems. Low- and middle-income countries seeking to achieve universal health coverage face human resource constraints - whether in the form of health worker shortages, maldistribution of workers or poor worker performance - that seriously undermine their ability to achieve well-functioning health systems. Although much has been written about the human resource crisis in the health sector, labour economic frameworks have seldom been applied to analyse the situation and little is known or understood about the operation of labour markets in low- and middle-income countries. Traditional approaches to addressing human resource constraints have focused on workforce planning: estimating health workforce requirements based on a country's epidemiological and demographic profile and scaling up education and training capacities to narrow the gap between the "needed" number of health workers and the existing number. However, this approach neglects other important factors that influence human resource capacity, including labour market dynamics and the behavioural responses and preferences of the health workers themselves. This paper describes how labour market analysis can contribute to a better understanding of the factors behind human resource constraints in the health sector and to a more effective design of policies and interventions to address them. The premise is that a better understanding of the impact of health policies on health labour markets, and subsequently on the employment conditions of health workers, would be helpful in identifying an effective strategy towards the progressive attainment of universal health coverage.
卫生人力资源对于建立反应灵敏且有效的卫生系统至关重要。寻求实现全民健康覆盖的中低收入国家面临着卫生人力方面的制约,例如卫生工作者短缺、人员分布不均或工作者绩效不佳等,这些因素严重削弱了其建立运转良好的卫生系统的能力。尽管人们对卫生部门的人力资源危机已经进行了大量的研究,但很少有劳动经济学框架用于分析这种情况,对中低收入国家劳动力市场的运作也知之甚少或了解甚少。传统的解决人力资源约束的方法侧重于劳动力规划:根据国家的流行病学和人口统计特征来估算卫生劳动力需求,并扩大教育和培训能力,以缩小“所需”卫生工作者数量与现有数量之间的差距。然而,这种方法忽略了影响人力资源能力的其他重要因素,包括劳动力市场动态以及卫生工作者自身的行为反应和偏好。本文描述了劳动力市场分析如何有助于更好地理解卫生部门人力资源约束背后的因素,并有助于更有效地制定政策和干预措施来解决这些问题。其前提是,更好地了解卫生政策对卫生劳动力市场的影响,进而对卫生工作者的就业条件产生影响,将有助于确定实现全民健康覆盖的渐进战略。