Knevel Rjm, Gussy M G, Farmer J
Department of Dentistry and Oral Health, College of Science, Health & Engineering, La Trobe University, Bendigo, Vic., Australia.
La Trobe University, Bendigo, Vic., Australia.
Int J Dent Hyg. 2017 May;15(2):95-105. doi: 10.1111/idh.12260. Epub 2016 Dec 12.
The purpose of this study was to scope the literature that exists about factors influencing oral health workforce planning and management in developing countries (DCs).
The Arksey and O'Malley method for conducting a scoping review was used. A replicable search strategy was applied, using three databases. Factors influencing oral health workforce planning and management in DCs identified in the eligible articles were charted.
Four thousand citations were identified; 41 papers were included for review. Most included papers were situational analyses. Factors identified were as follows: lack of data, focus on the restorative rather than preventive care in practitioner education, recent increase in number of dental schools (mostly private) and dentistry students, privatization of dental care services which has little impact on care maldistribution, and debates about skill mix and scope of practice. Oral health workforce management in the eligible studies has a bias towards dentist-led systems. Due to a lack of country-specific oral health related data in developing or least developed countries (LDCs), oral health workforce planning often relies on data and modelling from other countries.
Approaches to oral health workforce management and planning in developing or LDCs are often characterized by approaches to increase numbers of dentists, thus not ameliorating maldistribution of service accessibility. Governments appear to be reducing support for public and preventative oral healthcare, favouring growth in privatized dental services. Changes to professional education are necessary to trigger a paradigm shift to the preventive approach and to improve relationships between different oral healthcare provider roles. This needs to be premised on greater appreciation of preventive care in health systems and funding models.
本研究旨在梳理发展中国家影响口腔卫生人力规划与管理的现有文献。
采用阿克斯和奥马利进行范围综述的方法。运用可重复的检索策略,使用三个数据库。对符合条件的文章中确定的影响发展中国家口腔卫生人力规划与管理的因素进行梳理。
共识别出4000条引文;纳入41篇论文进行综述。大多数纳入的论文为情况分析。确定的因素如下:数据缺乏、从业者教育侧重于修复治疗而非预防保健、牙科学校(大多为私立)和牙科专业学生数量近期增加、牙科护理服务私有化对护理分配不均影响不大,以及关于技能组合和执业范围的争论。符合条件的研究中的口腔卫生人力管理偏向牙医主导的体系。由于发展中国家或最不发达国家缺乏特定国家的口腔卫生相关数据,口腔卫生人力规划往往依赖其他国家的数据和模型。
发展中国家或最不发达国家的口腔卫生人力管理和规划方法通常以增加牙医数量为特点,因此并未改善服务可及性的分配不均。政府似乎在减少对公共和预防性口腔医疗保健的支持,倾向于私有化牙科服务的增长。有必要对专业教育进行变革,以引发向预防方法的范式转变,并改善不同口腔医疗服务提供者角色之间的关系。这需要以卫生系统和资助模式中对预防保健有更高认识为前提。