Olafsdottir Anna Elisabet, Mayumana Iddy, Mashasi Irene, Njau Ikunda, Mamdani Masuma, Patouillard Edith, Binyaruka Peter, Abdulla Salim, Borghi Josephine
Ifakara Health Institute, Plot 463, Kiko Avenue Mikocheni, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2014 Sep 16;14:392. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-392.
Pay for performance schemes are increasingly being implemented in low income countries to improve health service coverage and quality. This paper describes the context within which a pay for performance programme was introduced in Tanzania and discusses the potential for pay for performance to address health system constraints to meeting targets.
40 in-depth interviews and four focus group discussions were undertaken with health workers, and regional, district and facility managers. Data was collected on work environment characteristics and staff attitudes towards work in the first phase of the implementation of the pilot. A survey of 75 facilities and 101 health workers were carried out to examine facility resourcing, and health worker employment conditions and job satisfaction.
Five contextual factors which affect the implementation of P4P were identified by health workers: salary and employment benefits; resource availability, including staff, medicines and functioning equipment; supervision; facility access to utilities; and community preferences. The results suggest that it is important to consider contextual issues when implementing pay for performance schemes in low income settings. It highlights the importance of basic infrastructures being in place, a minimum number of staff with appropriate education and skills as well as sufficient resources before implementing pay for performance.
Health professionals working within a pay for performance scheme in Tanzania were concerned about challenges related to shortages of resources, limited supplies and unfavourable community preferences. The P4P scheme may provide the incentive and means to address certain constraints, in so far as they are within the control of providers and managers, however, other constraints will be harder to address.
低收入国家越来越多地实施绩效薪酬计划,以提高卫生服务的覆盖范围和质量。本文描述了坦桑尼亚引入绩效薪酬计划的背景,并讨论了绩效薪酬在解决卫生系统实现目标的制约因素方面的潜力。
对卫生工作者、区域、地区和机构管理人员进行了40次深入访谈和4次焦点小组讨论。在试点实施的第一阶段,收集了关于工作环境特征和工作人员工作态度的数据。对75个机构和101名卫生工作者进行了调查,以检查机构资源、卫生工作者的就业条件和工作满意度。
卫生工作者确定了影响绩效薪酬实施的五个背景因素:工资和就业福利;资源可用性,包括人员、药品和正常运转的设备;监督;机构获得公用事业的情况;以及社区偏好。结果表明,在低收入环境中实施绩效薪酬计划时,考虑背景问题很重要。它强调了在实施绩效薪酬之前,具备基本基础设施、拥有适当教育和技能的最低数量工作人员以及充足资源的重要性。
在坦桑尼亚绩效薪酬计划下工作的卫生专业人员担心与资源短缺、供应有限和不利的社区偏好相关的挑战。绩效薪酬计划可能提供激励措施和手段来解决某些制约因素,只要这些因素在提供者和管理者的控制范围内,然而,其他制约因素将更难解决。