| Literature DB >> 19656381 |
Erin Ueffing1, Peter Tugwell, Janet Hatcher Roberts, Peter Walker, Nadia Hamel, Vivian Welch.
Abstract
Human resources for health are in crisis worldwide, especially in economically disadvantaged areas and areas with high rates of HIV/AIDS in both health workers and patients. International organizations such as the Global Health Workforce Alliance have been established to address this crisis. A technical working group within the Global Health Workforce Alliance developed recommendations for scaling up education and training of health workers. The paper will illustrate how decision-makers can use evidence and tools from an equity-oriented toolkit to scale up training and education of health workers, following five recommendations of the technical working group. The Equity-Oriented Toolkit, developed by the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Knowledge Translation and Health Technology Assessment in Health Equity, has four major steps: (1) burden of illness; (2) community effectiveness; (3) economic evaluation; and (4) knowledge translation/implementation. Relevant tools from each of these steps will be matched with the appropriate recommendation from the technical working group.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19656381 PMCID: PMC2731728 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-7-67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Figure 1The Equity-Oriented Toolkit.
Systematic reviews on human resources for health
| Training | 1 | Admissions criteria, curriculum content, location of training |
| Regulatory mechanisms | 1 | Recognition of overseas qualifications, underserved area service requirements |
| Financial mechanisms | 4 | Payment for performance, remuneration methods, incentives for location in underserved areas |
| Organizational mechanisms | 21 | Changes in workflow, information management, lay health workers, service integration, teamwork, substitution/extending roles, quality improvement, continuing education |