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World
Health Day 2006
World
Health Organisation (WHO)
April 07, 2006
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2006/pr19/en/index.html
Health workforce
crisis is having a deadly impact on many countries' ability to fight
disease and improve health, new WHO report warns
World Health
Report outlines need for more investment in health workforce to
improve working conditions, revitalize training institutions and
anticipate future challenges
GENEVA/LUSAKA/LONDON
-- A serious shortage of health workers in 57 countries is impairing
provision of essential, life-saving interventions such as childhood
immunization, safe pregnancy and delivery services for mothers,
and access to treatment for HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis.
This shortage, combined with a lack of training and knowledge, is
also a major obstacle for health systems as they attempt to respond
effectively to chronic diseases, avian influenza and other health
challenges, according to The World Health Report 2006 - Working
together for health, published today by the World Health Organization
(WHO).
More than four
million additional doctors, nurses, midwives, managers and public
health workers are urgently needed to fill the gap in these 57 countries,
36 of which are in sub-Saharan Africa, says the Report, which is
highlighted by events in many cities around the world to mark World
Health Day. Every country needs to improve the way it plans for,
educates and employs the doctors, nurses and support staff who make
up the health workforce and provide them with better working conditions,
it concludes.
"The global
population is growing, but the number of health workers is stagnating
or even falling in many of the places where they are needed most,"
said WHO Director-General Dr LEE Jong-wook. "Across the developing
world, health workers face economic hardship, deteriorating infrastructure
and social unrest. In many countries, the HIV/AIDS epidemic has
also destroyed the health and lives of health workers."
The World Health
Report sets out a 10-year plan to address the crisis. It calls for
national leadership to urgently formulate and implement country
strategies for the health workforce. These need to be backed by
international donor assistance.
Infectious diseases
and complications of pregnancy and delivery cause at least 10 million
deaths each year. Better access to health workers could prevent
many of those deaths. There is clear evidence that as the ratio
of health workers to population increases, so in turn does infant,
child and maternal survival.
"Not enough
health workers are being trained or recruited where they are most
needed, and increasing numbers are joining a brain drain of qualified
professionals who are migrating to better-paid jobs in richer countries,
whether those countries are near neighbours or wealthy industrialized
nations. Such countries are likely to attract even more foreign
staff because of their ageing populations, who will need more long-term,
chronic care," said WHO Assistant Director-General Dr Timothy
Evans.
To tackle this
crisis, more direct investment in the training and support of health
workers is needed now. Initial costs will be for the training of
more health workers. As they graduate and enter the workforce, funds
will be needed to pay their salaries. Health budgets will have to
increase by at least US$10 per person per year in the 57 countries
with severe shortages to educate and pay the salaries of the four
million health workers needed to fill the gap. To meet that target
within 20 years is an ambitious but reasonable goal, the Report
concludes.
Financing this
gap will require significant, dedicated and predictable funding
from national sources, as well as from international development
partners. The Report recommends that of all new donor funds for
health, 50% should be dedicated to strengthening health systems,
of which 50% should be dedicated specifically to training, retaining
and sustaining the health workforce.
At least 1.3
billion people worldwide lack access to the most basic healthcare,
often because there is no health worker. The shortage is global,
but the burden is greatest in countries overwhelmed by poverty and
disease where these health workers are needed most. Shortages are
most severe in sub-Saharan Africa, which has 11% of the world's
population and 24% of the global burden of disease but only 3% of
the world's health workers.
The Report calls
for prompt and innovative initiatives to improve efficiency. For
example, HIV/AIDS, TB and other priority disease programmes have
implemented ways for health workers with limited formal training
to successfully carry out specific health tasks. These experiences
should be drawn upon to develop national health workforce strategies.
The World Health
Report recommends that in order to achieve the goal of getting "the
right workers with the right skills in the right place doing the
right things," countries should develop plans that include
the following:
- Acting now
for workforce productivity: better working conditions for health
workers, improved safety, better access to treatment and care;
- Anticipating
what lies ahead: a well-developed plan to train the health workforce
of the future;
- Acquiring
critical capacity: workforce planning; development of leadership
and management; standard setting, accreditation and licensing
as drivers for quality improvement.
Beyond the national
strategies the report urges global cooperation:
- Joint investment
in research and information systems;
- Agreements
on ethical recruitment of and working conditions for migrant health
workers and international planning on the health workforce for
humanitarian emergencies or global health threats such as an influenza
pandemic;
- Commitment
from donor countries to assist crisis countries with their efforts
to improve and support the health workforce.
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