Dental Public Health, King's College London, Faculty of Dentistry, Oral & Craniofacial Sciences, Denmark Hill Campus, London SE5 9RS, UK.
Dental Office, WHO Oral Health Programme NCD Department, Division of UHC/Communicable and NCDs, World Health Organization, 20 Avenue Appia, Geneva 1211, Switzerland.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Jan 28;20(3):2328. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20032328.
The World Health Organization (WHO) African Region (AFR) has 47 countries. The aim of this research was to review the oral health workforce (OHWF) comprising dentists, dental assistants and therapists, and dental prosthetic technicians in the AFR. OHWF data from a survey of all 47 member states were triangulated with the National Health Workforce Accounts and population data. Descriptive analysis of workforce trends and densities per 10,000 population from 2000 to 2019 was performed, and perceived workforce challenges/possible solutions were suggested. Linear regression modelling used the Human Development Index (HDI), years of schooling, dental schools, and levels of urbanization as predictors of dentist density. Despite a growth of 63.6% since 2010, the current workforce density of dentists (per 10,000 population) in the AFR remains very low at 0.44, with marked intra-regional inequity (Seychelles, 4.297; South Sudan 0.003). The stock of dentists just exceeds that of dental assistants/therapists (1:0.91). Workforce density of dentists and the OHWF overall was strongly associated with the HDI and mean years of schooling. The dominant perceived challenge was identified as 'mal-distribution of the workforce (urban/rural)' and 'oral health' being 'considered low priority'. Action to 'strengthen oral health policy' and provide 'incentives to work in underserved areas' were considered important solutions in the region. Whilst utilising workforce skill mix contributes to overall capacity, there is a stark deficit of human resources for oral health in the AFR. There is an urgent need to strengthen policy, health, and education systems to expand the OHWF using innovative workforce models to meet the needs of this region and achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
世界卫生组织(WHO)非洲区域(AFR)有 47 个国家。本研究旨在审查该区域的口腔卫生人力(OHWF),包括牙医、牙科助理和治疗师以及牙科修复技术人员。通过对所有 47 个成员国的调查数据,与国家卫生人力账户和人口数据进行了三角剖分。对 2000 年至 2019 年期间劳动力趋势和每 10000 人口密度进行了描述性分析,并提出了劳动力挑战/可能的解决方案。使用人类发展指数(HDI)、受教育年限、牙科学院和城市化水平作为牙医密度的预测因子,进行了线性回归建模。尽管自 2010 年以来增长了 63.6%,但非洲区域目前的牙医劳动力密度(每 10000 人口)仍然非常低,仅为 0.44,区域内存在明显的不平等(塞舌尔为 4.297,南苏丹为 0.003)。牙医人数略多于牙科助理/治疗师(1:0.91)。牙医和 OHWF 的劳动力密度与人类发展指数和平均受教育年限密切相关。主要的挑战被认为是“劳动力分布不均(城乡)”和“口腔健康被认为是低优先级”。在该地区,“加强口腔健康政策”和“为服务不足地区的工作提供激励”被认为是重要的解决方案。尽管利用劳动力技能组合有助于提高整体能力,但非洲区域的口腔卫生人力资源严重短缺。迫切需要加强政策、卫生和教育系统,利用创新的劳动力模式来扩大 OHWF,以满足该区域的需求并实现全民健康覆盖(UHC)。