Moosa Shabir, Wojczewski Silvia, Hoffmann Kathryn, Poppe Annelien, Nkomazana Oathokwa, Peersman Wim, Willcox Merlin, Derese Anselme, Mant David
Department of Family Medicine, University of Witwatersrand, Parktown, South Africa.
Department of General Practice and Family Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;
Br J Gen Pract. 2014 Jun;64(623):e321-8. doi: 10.3399/bjgp14X680089.
Many low-income and middle-income countries globally are now pursuing ambitious plans for universal primary care, but are failing to deliver adequate care quality because of intractable human resource problems.
To understand why migrant nurses and doctors from sub-Saharan Africa did not wish to take up available posts in primary and first-contact care in their home countries.
Qualitative study of migrant health workers to Europe (UK, Belgium, and Austria) or southern Africa (Botswana and South Africa) from sub-Saharan Africa.
Semi-structured interviews with 66 health workers (24 nurses and 42 doctors) from 18 countries between July 2011 and April 2012. Transcripts were analysed thematically using a framework approach.
The reasons given for choosing not to work in primary care were grouped into three main analytic streams: poor working environment, difficult living experiences, and poor career path. Responders described a lack of basic medicines and equipment, an unmanageable workload, and lack of professional support. Many had concerns about personal security, living conditions (such as education for children), and poor income. Primary care was seen as lower status than hospital medicine, with lack of specialist training opportunities and more exposure to corruption.
Clinicians are reluctant to work in the conditions they currently experience in primary care in sub-Saharan Africa and these conditions tend to get worse as poverty and need for primary care increases. This inverse primary care law undermines achievement of universal health coverage. Policy experience from countries outside Africa shows that it is not immutable.
全球许多低收入和中等收入国家目前都在推行雄心勃勃的普及初级保健计划,但由于棘手的人力资源问题,未能提供足够的医疗质量。
了解撒哈拉以南非洲的移民护士和医生为何不愿在其祖国担任初级和首诊护理的现有职位。
对从撒哈拉以南非洲移民到欧洲(英国、比利时和奥地利)或南部非洲(博茨瓦纳和南非)的卫生工作者进行定性研究。
2011年7月至2012年4月期间,对来自18个国家的66名卫生工作者(24名护士和42名医生)进行半结构化访谈。使用框架方法对访谈记录进行主题分析。
选择不在初级保健领域工作的原因主要分为三个分析类别:恶劣的工作环境、艰难的生活经历和糟糕的职业发展道路。受访者描述了基本药品和设备的匮乏、难以承受的工作量以及缺乏专业支持。许多人担心个人安全、生活条件(如子女教育)和收入微薄。初级保健被认为地位低于医院医疗,缺乏专科培训机会,且更容易接触到腐败现象。
临床医生不愿在撒哈拉以南非洲目前的初级保健条件下工作,而且随着贫困加剧和对初级保健需求的增加,这些条件往往会变得更糟。这种反向初级保健规律破坏了全民健康覆盖的实现。非洲以外国家的政策经验表明,这种情况并非不可改变。