Morell Anna L, Kiem Sandra, Millsteed Melanie A, Pollice Almerinda
Health Workforce Australia, 400 King William Street, Adelaide, Australia.
Hum Resour Health. 2014 Mar 6;12:15. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-12-15.
Australians living in rural and remote communities experience relatively poor health status in comparison to the wider Australian population (Med J Aust 185:37-38, 2006). This can be attributed in part to issues of access to health services arising from difficulties in recruiting and retaining health professionals in these areas. The Rural Health Professionals Program is an initiative designed to increase the number of allied health and nursing professionals in rural and remote Australia by providing case managed recruitment and retention support services. This paper reports on early analysis of available programme data to build knowledge of factors related to the recruitment and distribution of health professionals in rural and remote Australia.
Administrative programme data were collected monthly from 349 health professionals over the first 13 months of programme operation. These data were collated and quantitative analysis was conducted using SPSS software.
Sixty-nine percent of recruits were women, and recruits had a mean age of 32.85 (SD = 10.92). Sixty percent of recruits were domestically trained, and the top two professions recruited were nurses (29%) and physiotherapists (21%). Eighty-seven percent were recruited to regional areas, with the remaining 13% recruited to remote areas. Among reasons for interest in the programme, financial support factors were most commonly cited by recruits (51%). Recruitment to a remote location was associated with being domestically trained, having previously lived in a rural or remote location, being a nurse (as opposed to an allied health professional) and older age.
The findings provide early support for a case managed recruitment programme to improve distribution of health professionals, and some directions for future marketing and promotion of the programme. It is recommended that an outcome evaluation be conducted to determine the impact of the programme on recruitment and distribution outcomes.
The findings herein begin to address gaps in the literature relating to the effectiveness of interventions to improve the distribution of health professionals. While this provides some preliminary indication that case managed recruitment and retention programmes have capacity to improve distribution, further research and evaluation is required to confirm the impact of the programme on retention.
与广大澳大利亚人口相比,生活在农村和偏远社区的澳大利亚人健康状况相对较差(《澳大利亚医学杂志》185:37 - 38,2006年)。这部分可归因于这些地区在招聘和留住卫生专业人员方面存在困难,进而导致获得卫生服务的问题。农村卫生专业人员计划是一项旨在通过提供个案管理的招聘和留用支持服务,增加澳大利亚农村和偏远地区专职医疗和护理专业人员数量的倡议。本文报告了对现有项目数据的早期分析,以了解与澳大利亚农村和偏远地区卫生专业人员招聘和分布相关的因素。
在项目运营的前13个月里,每月从349名卫生专业人员那里收集行政项目数据。对这些数据进行整理,并使用SPSS软件进行定量分析。
69%的新招募人员为女性,新招募人员的平均年龄为32.85岁(标准差 = 10.92)。60%的新招募人员在澳大利亚国内接受培训,招募人数最多的两个专业是护士(29%)和物理治疗师(21%)。87%的人员被招募到地区,其余13%被招募到偏远地区。在对该项目感兴趣的原因中,新招募人员最常提到的是经济支持因素(51%)。被招募到偏远地区与在澳大利亚国内接受培训、以前生活在农村或偏远地区、是护士(而非专职医疗专业人员)以及年龄较大有关。
这些发现为个案管理的招聘项目改善卫生专业人员分布提供了早期支持,并为该项目未来的营销和推广提供了一些方向。建议进行结果评估,以确定该项目对招聘和分布结果的影响。
本文的研究结果开始填补文献中关于改善卫生专业人员分布干预措施有效性方面的空白。虽然这提供了一些初步迹象,表明个案管理的招聘和留用项目有能力改善分布,但需要进一步的研究和评估来确认该项目对留用的影响。