Abimbola Seye, Olanipekun Titilope, Igbokwe Uchenna, Negin Joel, Jan Stephen, Martiniuk Alexandra, Ihebuzor Nnenna, Aina Muyi
National Primary Health Care Development Agency, Abuja, Nigeria.
School of Public Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Glob Health Action. 2015 Mar 3;8:26616. doi: 10.3402/gha.v8.26616. eCollection 2015.
In Nigeria, the shortage of health workers is worst at the primary health care (PHC) level, especially in rural communities. And the responsibility for PHC - usually the only form of formal health service available in rural communities - is shared among the three tiers of government (federal, state, and local governments). In addition, the responsibility for community engagement in PHC is delegated to community health committees.
This study examines how the decentralisation of health system governance influences retention of health workers in rural communities in Nigeria from the perspective of health managers, health workers, and people living in rural communities.
The study adopted a qualitative approach, and data were collected using semi-structured in-depth interviews and focus group discussions. The multi-stakeholder data were analysed for themes related to health system decentralisation.
The results showed that decentralisation influences the retention of rural health workers in two ways: 1) The salary of PHC workers is often delayed and irregular as a result of delays in transfer of funds from the national to sub-national governments and because one tier of government can blame failure on another tier of government. Further, the primary responsibility for PHC is often left to the weakest tier of government (local governments). And the result is that rural PHC workers are attracted to working at levels of care where salaries are higher and more regular - in secondary care (run by state governments) and tertiary care (run by the federal government), which are also usually in urban areas. 2) Through community health committees, rural communities influence the retention of health workers by working to increase the uptake of PHC services. Community efforts to retain health workers also include providing social, financial, and accommodation support to health workers. To encourage health workers to stay, communities also take the initiative to co-finance and co-manage PHC services in order to ensure that PHC facilities are functional.
In Nigeria and other low- and middle-income countries with decentralised health systems, intervention to increase the retention of health workers in rural communities should seek to reform and strengthen governance mechanisms, using both top-down and bottom-up strategies to improve the remuneration and support for health workers in rural communities.
在尼日利亚,卫生工作者短缺在初级卫生保健层面最为严重,尤其是在农村社区。而初级卫生保健的责任——通常是农村社区唯一可获得的正规卫生服务形式——由三级政府(联邦、州和地方政府)共同承担。此外,社区参与初级卫生保健的责任被委托给社区卫生委员会。
本研究从卫生管理人员、卫生工作者和农村社区居民的角度,探讨卫生系统治理的分权化如何影响尼日利亚农村社区卫生工作者的留用情况。
本研究采用定性研究方法,通过半结构化深度访谈和焦点小组讨论收集数据。对多利益相关方的数据进行分析,以找出与卫生系统分权化相关的主题。
结果表明,分权化通过两种方式影响农村卫生工作者的留用情况:1)由于资金从国家政府向次国家政府转移延迟,且一级政府可能将失败归咎于另一级政府,初级卫生保健工作者的工资经常延迟发放且不规律。此外,初级卫生保健的主要责任往往落在最薄弱的政府层级(地方政府)身上。结果是,农村初级卫生保健工作者被吸引到工资更高且更规律的医疗服务层级工作——二级保健(由州政府运营)和三级保健(由联邦政府运营),这些通常也位于城市地区。2)农村社区通过社区卫生委员会努力提高初级卫生保健服务的利用率,从而影响卫生工作者的留用情况。社区留住卫生工作者的努力还包括为卫生工作者提供社会、经济和住宿支持。为鼓励卫生工作者留任,社区还主动共同资助和共同管理初级卫生保健服务,以确保初级卫生保健设施能够正常运转。
在尼日利亚以及其他卫生系统分权化的低收入和中等收入国家,为提高农村社区卫生工作者留用率而进行的干预措施应寻求改革和加强治理机制,采用自上而下和自下而上的策略来改善农村社区卫生工作者的薪酬待遇和支持力度。