Jolivet R Rima, Munson Erica, Gouse Isabel, Chodzaza Elizabeth, Chowdhury M Elahi, Dieng Thierno, Lobis Samantha, Moreira Isabelle, Ramsey Kate, Warthin Caitlin, Freedman Lynn P
Independent consultant, Boston, USA.
Averting Maternal Death and Disability Program, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York, USA.
J Glob Health. 2025 Aug 10;15:04223. doi: 10.7189/jogh.15.04223.
A shortage of health workers with skills to deliver high-quality routine and emergency maternal and newborn health (MNH) care hinders achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. Health worker well-being is a determinant of the quality and experiences of care. The emergency obstetric and newborn care (EmONC) framework supports country-level planners and managers to evaluate EmONC systems. We describe a measure development activity to identify a brief set of tracer measures to monitor facility-level health worker well-being in EmONC facilities.
We did an iterative, systematic, rapid scoping review of the literature on health worker well-being constructs and existing measures, complemented by focus group discussions and expert technical consultations. We systematically mapped, evaluated, and prioritised candidate items for indicator development, drawing on the literature and inputs from content experts (MNH health workers and stakeholders) and measurement experts, to select succinct, relevant, actionable tracer measures for monitoring health worker well-being at the facility, sub-national, and national levels. We chose the final items for indicator development based on clarity, sensitivity to change, interpretability, usefulness, generalisability, and reliability.
Burnout, lack of psychological safety, and moral distress were prioritised to serve as proxies for the whole domain of EmONC health worker well-being. We compiled three brief measures fully reflecting the operational definition for each construct, including complete metadata. Next steps include collecting pilot data and performing psychometric testing to validate the measures. Subsequently, we hope they can be implemented as tracer indicators to monitor overall facility-based health worker well-being.
We propose these candidate indicators as proxies to raise a 'red flag' when health worker well-being is low. We hope that they can alert health system administrators to the need to identify and address the root causes of threats to well-being, ensuring facility readiness to deliver EmONC.
缺乏具备提供高质量常规及紧急孕产妇和新生儿保健(MNH)护理技能的卫生工作者,阻碍了可持续发展目标的实现。卫生工作者的福祉是护理质量和体验的一个决定因素。紧急产科和新生儿护理(EmONC)框架支持国家层面的规划者和管理者评估EmONC系统。我们描述了一项指标开发活动,以确定一套简短的追踪指标,用于监测EmONC机构中卫生工作者的福祉。
我们对关于卫生工作者福祉构成要素和现有指标的文献进行了反复、系统、快速的范围界定审查,并辅以焦点小组讨论和专家技术咨询。我们系统地梳理、评估并确定了用于指标开发的候选项目的优先级,借鉴了文献以及内容专家(MNH卫生工作者和利益相关者)和测量专家的意见,以选择简洁、相关、可操作的追踪指标,用于在机构、次国家和国家层面监测卫生工作者的福祉。我们根据清晰度、对变化的敏感性、可解释性、实用性、普遍性和可靠性,选择了用于指标开发的最终项目。
倦怠、缺乏心理安全感和道德困扰被列为优先事项,作为EmONC卫生工作者福祉整个领域的代表。我们编制了三项简短的指标,充分反映了每个构成要素的操作定义,包括完整的元数据。下一步包括收集试点数据并进行心理测量测试以验证这些指标。随后,我们希望它们能够作为追踪指标实施,以监测基于机构的卫生工作者的整体福祉。
我们提议将这些候选指标作为代表,在卫生工作者福祉较低时发出“危险信号”。我们希望它们能够提醒卫生系统管理人员,需要识别和解决对福祉构成威胁的根本原因,确保机构做好提供EmONC的准备。