Osman Mohamed A, Alrukhaimi Mona, Ashuntantang Gloria E, Bellorin-Font Ezequiel, Benghanem Gharbi Mohammed, Braam Branko, Courtney Mark, Feehally John, Harris David C, Jha Vivekanand, Jindal Kailash, Johnson David W, Kalantar-Zadeh Kamyar, Kazancioglu Rumeyza, Klarenbach Scott, Levin Adeera, Lunney Meaghan, Okpechi Ikechi G, Olanrewaju Timothy Olusegun, Perl Jeffrey, Rashid Harun Ur, Rondeau Eric, Salako Babatunde Lawal, Samimi Arian, Sola Laura, Tchokhonelidze Irma, Wiebe Natasha, Yang Chih-Wei, Ye Feng, Zemchenkov Alexander, Zhao Ming-Hui, Bello Aminu K
Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Dubai Medical College, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Kidney Int Suppl (2011). 2018 Feb;8(2):52-63. doi: 10.1016/j.kisu.2017.10.009. Epub 2018 Jan 19.
The health workforce is the cornerstone of any health care system. An adequately trained and sufficiently staffed workforce is essential to reach universal health coverage. In particular, a nephrology workforce is critical to meet the growing worldwide burden of kidney disease. Despite some attempts, the global nephrology workforce and training capacity remains widely unknown. This multinational cross-sectional survey was part of the Global Kidney Health Atlas project, a new initiative administered by the International Society of Nephrology (ISN). The objective of this study was to address the existing global nephrology workforce and training capacity. The questionnaire was administered online, and all data were analyzed and presented by ISN regions and World Bank country classification. Overall, 125 United Nations member states responded to the entire survey, with 121 countries responding to survey questions pertaining to the nephrology workforce. The global nephrologist density was 8.83 per million population (PMP); high-income countries reported a nephrologist density of 28.52 PMP compared with 0.31 PMP in low-income countries. Similarly, the global nephrologist trainee density was 1.87 PMP; high-income countries reported a 30 times greater nephrology trainee density than low-income countries (6.03 PMP vs. 0.18 PMP). Countries reported a shortage in all care providers in nephrology. A nephrology training program existed in 79% of countries, ranging from 97% in high-income countries to 41% in low-income countries. In countries with a training program, the majority (86%) of programs were 2 to 4 years, and the most common training structure (56%) was following general internal medicine. We found significant variation in the global density of nephrologists and nephrology trainees and shortages in all care providers in nephrology; the gap was more prominent in low-income countries, particularly in African and South Asian ISN regions. These findings point to significant gaps in the current nephrology workforce and opportunities for countries and regions to develop and maintain a sustainable workforce.
卫生人力是任何医疗保健系统的基石。一支训练有素、人员配备充足的卫生人力队伍对于实现全民健康覆盖至关重要。特别是,肾脏病专业卫生人力对于应对全球日益加重的肾脏疾病负担至关重要。尽管进行了一些尝试,但全球肾脏病专业卫生人力和培训能力仍然鲜为人知。这项多国横断面调查是全球肾脏健康地图项目的一部分,该项目是由国际肾脏病学会(ISN)管理的一项新倡议。本研究的目的是了解现有的全球肾脏病专业卫生人力和培训能力。调查问卷通过在线方式发放,所有数据由ISN地区和世界银行国家分类进行分析和呈现。总体而言,125个联合国成员国回复了全部调查,121个国家回复了与肾脏病专业卫生人力相关的调查问题。全球肾脏病医生密度为每百万人口8.83名(PMP);高收入国家报告的肾脏病医生密度为28.52 PMP,而低收入国家为每百万人口0.31名。同样,全球肾脏病实习医生密度为每百万人口1.87名;高收入国家报告的肾脏病实习医生密度比低收入国家高30倍(6.03 PMP对0.18 PMP)。各国报告肾脏病领域所有护理人员均短缺。79%的国家设有肾脏病培训项目,范围从高收入国家的97%到低收入国家的41%。在设有培训项目的国家中,大多数(86%)项目为期2至4年,最常见的培训结构(56%)是在普通内科之后。我们发现全球肾脏病医生和实习医生的密度存在显著差异,且肾脏病领域所有护理人员均短缺;低收入国家的差距更为突出,特别是在非洲和南亚的ISN地区。这些发现表明当前肾脏病专业卫生人力存在重大差距,也为各国和各地区发展和维持可持续的卫生人力队伍提供了机遇。