| Literature DB >> 22140364 |
Kelly Curran1, Emmanuel Njeuhmeli, Andrew Mirelman, Kim Dickson, Tigistu Adamu, Peter Cherutich, Hally Mahler, Bennett Fimbo, Thembisile Khumalo Mavuso, Jennifer Albertini, Laura Fitzgerald, Naomi Bock, Jason Reed, Delivette Castor, David Stanton.
Abstract
Voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) reduces female-to-male HIV transmission by approximately 60%; modeling suggests that scaling up VMMC to 80% of men 15- to 49-years-old within five years would avert over 3.3 million new HIV infections in 14 high priority countries/regions in southern and eastern Africa by 2025 and would require 20.33 million circumcisions. However, the shortage of health professionals in these countries must be addressed to reach these proposed coverage levels. To identify human resource approaches that are being used to improve VMMC volume and efficiency, we looked at previous literature and conducted a program review. We identified surgical efficiencies, non-surgical efficiencies, task shifting, task sharing, temporary redeployment of public sector staff during VMMC campaign periods, expansion of the health workforce through recruitment of unemployed, recently retired, newly graduating, or on-leave health care workers, and the use of volunteer medical staff from other countries as approaches that address human resource constraints. Case studies from Kenya, Tanzania, and Swaziland illustrate several innovative responses to human resource challenges. Although the shortage of skilled personnel remains a major challenge to the rapid scale-up of VMMC in the 14 African priority countries/regions, health programs throughout the region may be able to replicate or adapt these approaches to scale up VMMC for public health impact.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22140364 PMCID: PMC3226463 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Density of physicians and nurses/midwives in VMMC priority countries.
| Country | Physician Density (per 1,000 Individuals) | Nurse/Midwife Density (per 1,000 Individuals) | Year |
| Botswana | 0.40 | 2.65 | 2004 |
| Ethiopia | 0.02 | 0.24 | 2007 |
| Kenya | 0.14 | 1.18 | 2002 |
| Lesotho | 0.05 | 0.62 | 2003 |
| Malawi | 0.02 | 0.28 | 2008 |
| Mozambique | 0.03 | 0.31 | 2006 |
| Namibia | 0.30 | 3.06 | 2004 |
| Rwanda | 0.02 | 0.45 | 2005 |
| South Africa | 0.77 | 4.08 | 2004 |
| Swaziland | 0.16 | 6.30 | 2004 |
| Tanzania | 0.01 | 0.24 | 2006 |
| Uganda | 0.12 | 1.31 | 2005 |
| Zambia | 0.06 | 0.71 | 2006 |
| Zimbabwe | 0.16 | 0.72 | 2004 |
| Mean | 0.16 | 1.58 | — |
| United States | 2.56 | 9.37 | 2000 |
Sources: [32],[33].
VMMC programming focuses on the Gambella Region of Ethiopia and the Nyanza Province of Kenya, but these data refer to health care densities over the whole country in both cases.
Mean density of African-country-specific data is from different years.
Figure 1Number of circumcisions among men aged 15 to 49 years needed to reach 80% coverage in each of 14 priority countries/regions within five years.
For Ethiopia (Gambella Region) and Kenya (Nyanza Province), only one region or province with low circumcision rates and high HIV prevalence is included, as most men in these countries are already circumcised.
Figure 2Conventional and modified surgical approaches to MC provision.
(A) The conventional approach to MC provision requires 20–30 minutes per procedure and allows only two surgeries per hour (ten surgeries per day) because of the doctors “downtime” between procedures. (B) With the modified surgical approach to MC provision (MOVE), each procedure still takes 20–30 minutes, but task sharing reduces the doctor's time to 6–8 minutes per procedure, which allows eight surgeries per hour (40 surgeries per day).
Composition of VMMC clinical teams in Swaziland initiative.
| Title | Number | Role on Team |
| Site manager | 1 | Ensure that the team has all supplies and equipment necessary, supervise team members and coordinate with demand-generation partners |
| Doctor | 1 | Remove foreskin, achieve hemostasis, place horizontal and vertical mattress sutures |
| Anesthesia/suture nurse | 1 | Apply local anesthesia, place simple interrupted sutures |
| Bedside nurses | 4 | Prep and drape client, assist during MC surgery, place bandage |
| Recovery room nurse | 1 | Monitor vital signs, provide postoperative care instructions, check bandage before discharging client |
| Review nurse | 1 | Conduct two-day and seven-day reviews |
| Counselors | 3 | Conduct group education, MC counseling, and HTC |
| Runner (non-clinical) | 1 | Ensure that each surgical bay has the supplies it needs |
| Hygienist | 1 | Ensure the clinic is clean, assist with waste management (only one needed due to use of fully disposable MC instrument kits and waste management company) |
| Expert client | 1 | Link clients who test HIV-positive to care and treatment services, model adherence to antiretroviral therapy |
| Receptionist | 1 | Book clients, start client record form |
| Data capturer | 1 | Record client data for monitoring and evaluation purposes |
| Booking agent | 1 | Manage client booking and link client with transport |
Quantification of the nursing workforce in the Kingdom of Swaziland.
| Category | Number | Comments |
| Unemployed but registered with the Swaziland Nursing Council | 110 | Zimbabwean: 57 (51.8%); Swazi: 32 (29.1%); Zambian: 4 (3.64%); Congolese: 4 (3.64%); Ugandan: 1 (0.9%); Ghanaian: 1 (0.9%); Nigerian: 1 (0.9%); Unknown: 10 (9.1%) |
| Recently retired (within five years) | 12 | These nurses all indicated their interest in returning to work to support MC services |
| Newly graduating professional nurses | 8 | Eight graduating nurses indicated their interest in working on MC full-time |
| Swazi nurses working in the UK | 5 | These nurses all indicated their interest in returning to Swaziland work to support |
| Newly graduating nursing assistants | 17 | These nursing assistants can staff recovery rooms or serve as bedside nurses (not anesthesia/suture nurses) |
| On-leave from public sector employment | Average of 107 per month | Most of these nurses are on vacation, not medical or maternity leave |
| Total | 259 |