| Literature DB >> 33203407 |
Sudip Bhandari1, Brian Wahl2, Sara Bennett2, Cyrus Y Engineer2, Pooja Pandey3, David H Peters2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ensuring the current public health workforce has appropriate competencies to fulfill essential public health functions is challenging in many low- and middle-income countries. The absence of an agreed set of core competencies to provide a basis for developing and assessing knowledge, skills, abilities, and attitudes contributes to this challenge. This study aims to identify the requisite core competencies for practicing health professionals in mid-level supervisory and program management roles to effectively perform their public health responsibilities in the resource-poor setting of Uttar Pradesh (UP), India.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi technique; Human resource development; India; Public health competencies
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33203407 PMCID: PMC7670983 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09711-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Step diagram of the process and results of identifying core competencies for public health professionals
Demographic characteristics of the Delphi participants (N = 22)
| Number | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 19 | 86% |
| Female | 3 | 14% |
| Current role | ||
| Academic | 6 | 27% |
| State trainera | 4 | 18% |
| Senior manager in government | 9 | 41% |
| Other (e.g., public health NGO) | 3 | 14% |
| Professional location | ||
| Within Uttar Pradesh | 16 | 72% |
| Outside of Uttar Pradesh | 6 | 28% |
aState trainers are the faculty members of the State Institute of Health and Family Welfare. One of their primary responsibilities is to train the newly inducted Medical Officers in the public system on public health topics
Results from Delphi scoring steps
*Competency statement was added in step 3—revision and addition of the list
bBolded statements compose the final list of competencies
cStep 8 (second round of Delphi scoring) had three fewer participants compared to Step 5 (first round of scoring). All three participants who left were male, two of whom were government human resource planner, and one was an academic. Note: participants are the same people in each step, as no new participants were added between steps
dConsensus was identified using percent agreement criterion. A statement was deemed to have reached consensus when over 80% of the participants ranked it as “very important = 4” or “absolutely essential = 5” in the second Delphi scoring step. The statements where no consensus was reached have been identified in the table above with a red text in the corresponding p-value
eStability between Delphi scoring steps was assessed using Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank test. We considered a statement to be stable if there was no statistically significant change in responses between the scoring steps for each statement (p ≥ 0.05). Statements where stability was not reached (p < 0.05) have also been identified in red text in the table above. Given the importance of these competencies, we left them on our final list. We recognize that subsequent Delphi steps to generate stability in these statements would have been ideal