Jesus Tiago S, Landry Michel D, Dussault Gilles, Fronteira Inês
Portuguese Ministry of Education, Aggregation of Schools of Escariz, 4540-320, Escariz, Portugal.
Doctor of Physical Therapy Division, Duke University Medical Center, Duke University, Box 104002, 27710, Durham, NC, United States of America.
Hum Resour Health. 2017 Jan 23;15(1):8. doi: 10.1186/s12960-017-0182-7.
People with disabilities face challenges accessing basic rehabilitation health care. In 2006, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) outlined the global necessity to meet the rehabilitation needs of people with disabilities, but this goal is often challenged by the undersupply and inequitable distribution of rehabilitation workers. While the aggregate study and monitoring of the physical rehabilitation workforce has been mostly ignored by researchers or policy-makers, this paper aims to present the 'challenges and opportunities' for guiding further long-term research and policies on developing the relatively neglected, highly heterogeneous physical rehabilitation workforce.
The challenges were identified through a two-phased investigation. Phase 1: critical review of the rehabilitation workforce literature, organized by the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality (AAAQ) framework. Phase 2: integrate reviewed data into a SWOT framework to identify the strengths and opportunities to be maximized and the weaknesses and threats to be overcome.
The critical review and SWOT analysis have identified the following global situation: (i) needs-based shortages and lack of access to rehabilitation workers, particularly in lower income countries and in rural/remote areas; (ii) deficiencies in the data sources and monitoring structures; and (iii) few exemplary innovations, of both national and international scope, that may help reduce supply-side shortages in underserved areas.
Based on the results, we have prioritized the following 'Six Rehab-Workforce Challenges': (1) monitoring supply requirements: accounting for rehabilitation needs and demand; (2) supply data sources: the need for structural improvements; (3) ensuring the study of a whole rehabilitation workforce (i.e. not focused on single professions), including across service levels; (4) staffing underserved locations: the rising of education, attractiveness and tele-service; (5) adapt policy options to different contexts (e.g. rural vs urban), even within a country; and (6) develop international solutions, within an interdependent world.
Concrete examples of feasible local, global and research action toward meeting the Six Rehab-Workforce Challenges are provided. Altogether, these may help advance a policy and research agenda for ensuring that an adequate rehabilitation workforce can meet the current and future rehabilitation health needs.
残疾人在获取基本康复医疗服务方面面临挑战。2006年,《联合国残疾人权利公约》(CRPD)强调了满足残疾人康复需求的全球必要性,但这一目标常常受到康复工作人员供应不足和分配不均的挑战。尽管物理康复劳动力的总体研究和监测大多被研究人员或政策制定者忽视,但本文旨在呈现“挑战与机遇”,以指导关于发展相对被忽视且高度多样化的物理康复劳动力的进一步长期研究和政策制定。
通过两阶段调查确定挑战。第一阶段:按照可及性、可获得性、可接受性和质量(AAAQ)框架对康复劳动力文献进行批判性综述。第二阶段:将综述数据整合到SWOT框架中,以确定需要最大化的优势和机遇以及需要克服的劣势和威胁。
批判性综述和SWOT分析确定了以下全球形势:(i)基于需求的康复工作人员短缺以及获取困难,尤其是在低收入国家和农村/偏远地区;(ii)数据来源和监测结构存在缺陷;(iii)国家和国际层面的示范性创新很少,这些创新可能有助于减少服务不足地区的供应方短缺。
基于研究结果,我们确定了以下“六项康复劳动力挑战”的优先级:(1)监测供应需求:考虑康复需求和需求情况;(2)供应数据来源:需要进行结构性改进;(3)确保对整个康复劳动力进行研究(即不局限于单一职业),包括不同服务层面;(4)为服务不足地区配备人员:提高教育水平、吸引力和远程服务;(5)使政策选择适应不同背景(如农村与城市),即使在一个国家内部;(6)在相互依存的世界中制定国际解决方案。
提供了应对六项康复劳动力挑战的可行的地方、全球和研究行动的具体示例。总体而言,这些可能有助于推进政策和研究议程,以确保有足够的康复劳动力能够满足当前和未来的康复医疗需求。