| Literature DB >> 15659241 |
Núria Homedes1, Antonio Ugalde.
Abstract
Human resources are the most important assets of any health system, and health workforce problems have for decades limited the efficiency and quality of Latin America health systems. World Bank-led reforms aimed at increasing equity, efficiency, quality of care and user satisfaction did not attempt to resolve the human resources problems that had been identified in multiple health sector assessments. However, the two most important reform policies - decentralization and privatization - have had a negative impact on the conditions of employment and prompted opposition from organized professionals and unions. In several countries of the region, the workforce became the most important obstacle to successful reform.This article is based on fieldwork and a review of the literature. It discusses the reasons that led health workers to oppose reform; the institutional and legal constraints to implementing reform as originally designed; the mismatch between the types of personnel needed for reform and the availability of professionals; the deficiencies of the reform implementation process; and the regulatory weaknesses of the region.The discussion presents workforce strategies that the reforms could have included to achieve the intended goals, and the need to take into account the values and political realities of the countries. The authors suggest that autochthonous solutions are more likely to succeed than solutions imported from the outside.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15659241 PMCID: PMC548503 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-3-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Resistance of the workforce to a market-oriented health care model
| a. Health is not a right, and the reformed system is no longer based on the principles of solidarity and access to health care. |
| b. Health workers become part of a flexible workforce and are encouraged to compete, instead of collaborate, among themselves. |
| c. Worker unions lose power to influence the system and negotiate work conditions of behalf of affiliates. |
| d. The reform is an abdication of the responsibilities of the government to protect the population. |
| e. Physicians fear losing their professional autonomy. |
Institutional and legal dimensions
| a. Lack of accurate information on the availability of human resources and their distribution. |
| b. Civil service status limits the capacity of managers to change the working conditions of personnel. |
| c. Decentralizing human resources is expensive: homologation of salaries and benefits; hiring of additional personnel. |
| d. Decentralized governments have limited ability to manage personnel to respond to the needs of the population. |
Inadequately trained personnel
| a. Human resources units are not adequately staffed, especially to manage change. |
| b. Lack of management experts, especially experts in insurance systems and contract managers. |
| c. Insufficient numbers of people trained in primary health care and public health related fields. |
| d. Training centers unable to produce personnel to operate the reformed health system. |
Faulty reform implementation process
| a. Lack of involvement of professional associations and labor unions in the definition of the reform. |
| b. Secrecy surrounding definition of the reform raises suspicions among those responsible for implementing it and predisposes them to resist the changes. |
| c. Lack of transition plan. |
Inadequate regulatory framework to ensure the quality of professionals and the performance of the sector
| a. Limited quality controls in training institutions. |
| b. Physician-dominated field that precludes other professional groups from being recognized as health care providers within the official health care system. |
| c. Limited accreditation of health care professionals. |
Consequences of the health reform on human resources
| a. Working conditions have worsened, and talented workers migrate to the private sector or to other countries. |
| b. The motivation of workers has deteriorated. |
| c. Productivity and quality may have deteriorated. |
| d. The uneven ratio of specialists to primary physicians has not changed. |
| e. The uneven distribution of personnel (hospital and urban bias) persists. |
| f. Corruption has not decreased. |