Durham Jo, Pavignani Enrico, Beesley Mark, Hill Peter S
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, 4006, Australia.
Hum Resour Health. 2015 Mar 29;13:14. doi: 10.1186/s12960-015-0005-7.
Research on "human resources for health" (HRH) typically focuses on the public health subsector, despite the World Health Organization's inclusive definition to the contrary. This qualitative research examines the profile of HRH in six conflict-affected contexts where the public health subsector does not dominate healthcare service provision and HRH is a less coherent and cohesive entity: Afghanistan, the Central African Republic (CAR), the Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo), Haiti, the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Somalia.
The study uses a multiple-country qualitative research design including documentary analysis and key informant interviews undertaken between 2010 and 2012. The documentary analysis included peer-reviewed articles, books, unpublished research and evaluations and donor and non-government organisation reviews. A common thematic guide, informed by this analysis, was used to undertake key informant interviews. Informants thought able to provide some insight into the research questions were identified from ministry of health organograms, and from listings of donors and non-government organisations. Local informants outside the familiar structures were also contacted. In CAR, 74 were interviewed; in Somalia 25; . in Haiti, 45; in Afghanistan, 41; in DR Congo, 32; and in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, 30. In addition, peer review was sought on the initial country reports.
The study discovered, in each healthcare arena investigated, a crowded HRH space with a wide range of public, private, formal and informal providers of varying levels of competence and a diverse richness of initiatives, shaped by the easy commodification of health and an unregulated market. The weak regulatory framework and capacity to regulate, combined with limited information regarding those not on the state payroll, allowed non-state providers to flourish, if not materially then at least numerically.
When examining HRH, a reliance on information provided by the state health sector can only provide a partial and inadequate representation of reality. For policy-makers and planners in disrupted contexts to begin to appreciate fully current and potential HRH, there is a need to study the workforce using conceptual tools that reflect the situation on the ground, rather than idealised patterns generated by incomplete inventories and unrealistic standards.
尽管世界卫生组织给出了包容性的定义,但“卫生人力资源”(HRH)研究通常聚焦于公共卫生部门。本定性研究考察了六个受冲突影响地区的卫生人力资源状况,在这些地区,公共卫生部门并非医疗服务提供的主导力量,且卫生人力资源是一个缺乏连贯性和凝聚力的实体,这些地区包括阿富汗、中非共和国、刚果民主共和国、海地、巴勒斯坦被占领土和索马里。
该研究采用多国定性研究设计,包括2010年至2012年期间进行的文献分析和关键 informant 访谈。文献分析包括同行评审文章、书籍、未发表的研究与评估以及捐助方和非政府组织的评论。在此分析基础上形成了一个通用的主题指南,用于进行关键 informant 访谈。从卫生部组织架构图以及捐助方和非政府组织的名单中确定了被认为能够对研究问题提供一些见解的 informant。还联系了熟悉结构之外的当地 informant。在中非共和国,访谈了74人;在索马里,访谈了25人;在海地,访谈了45人;在阿富汗,访谈了41人;在刚果民主共和国,访谈了32人;在巴勒斯坦被占领土,访谈了30人。此外,还寻求了对初步国家报告的同行评审。
该研究发现,在所调查的每个医疗领域,卫生人力资源领域都很拥挤,有各种各样的公共、私人、正规和非正规提供者,其能力水平各异,且有各种各样丰富的举措,这是由卫生的易商品化和不受监管的市场所塑造的。监管框架薄弱以及监管能力有限,再加上关于不在国家 payroll 上的人员的信息有限,使得非国家提供者得以蓬勃发展,即便不是在物质层面,至少在数量层面如此。
在考察卫生人力资源时,依赖国家卫生部门提供的信息只能部分且不充分地反映现实。对于处于动荡局势中的政策制定者和规划者而言,若要全面了解当前和潜在的卫生人力资源,就需要使用反映实地情况的概念工具来研究劳动力,而非使用由不完整清单和不切实际标准所产生的理想化模式。