| Literature DB >> 33795367 |
Nancy Bolan1, Karen D Cowgill2, Karen Walker3, Lily Kak4, Theresa Shaver5, Sarah Moxon6, Ornella Lincetto7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A critical shortage of health workers with needed maternal and newborn competencies remains a major challenge for the provision of quality care for mothers and newborns, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Supply-side challenges related to human resources for health (HRH) worsen shortages and can negatively affect health worker performance and quality of care. This review scoped country-focused sources to identify and map evidence on HRH-related challenges to quality facility-based newborn care provision by nurses and midwives.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33795367 PMCID: PMC8087437 DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Sci Pract ISSN: 2169-575X
FIGUREFlow Diagram of Search and Review Results of Evidence on Human Resources for Health-Related Challenges to Quality Newborn Care in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Mapped Human Resources for Health-Related Challenges With Review Sources
| HRH Challenge | Examples | Country | Source Type | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Lack of data on HRH | Scarce HRH data as a barrier to HRH planning | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. |
| Few workforce indicators for midwifery | Mongolia | PR | Kildea et al. | |
| 2. Poor HW preservice education/insufficient newborn content | Lack of qualified instructors and clinical preceptors for midwives | Democratic Republic of the Congo | PR | Bogren et al. |
| Basic neonatal component in nursing preservice insufficient | Ghana | PR | Elikplim Pomevor and Adomah-Afari | |
| Bachelor's-level nurse curriculum and performance poor compared to other providers (including diploma nurses) | Ethiopia | Report | Getachew et al. | |
| HWs receive limited preservice instruction on neonatal care in their basic training | Kenya | PR | Aluvaala et al. | |
| NB care not a core competency in general nursing education | India | PR | Campbell-Yeo et al. | |
| 3. Lack of access for HWs to evidence-based practice guidelines and protocols, CE, and CPD | Nonavailability of ENC and NR guidelines/protocols | Ethiopia | PR | Haile-Mariam et al. |
| Lack of guidelines/posted protocols NR | Malawi | PR | Bream et al. | |
| Few protocols for care of sick neonates available | Ghana | PR | Elikplim Pomevor and Adomah-Afari | |
| Helping Babies Breathe guidelines in 25% of health facilities | Malawi | PR | Kozuki et al. | |
| Nonavailability of NB protocols | Tanzania | PR | Nyamtema et al. | |
| Poor dissemination of practice protocols to NICU nurses | Thailand | PR | Jirapaet et al. | |
| Little in-service training on NB, NR, and small and sick newborn care | Ghana | PR | Elikplim Pomevor and Adomah-Afari | |
| India | PR | Malhotra et al. | ||
| 75% of health centers studied had no trained clinician in basic emergency obstetric and newborn care | Malawi | PR | Kozuki et al. | |
| Variable CE opportunities for neonatal nurses | India | PR | Campbell-Yeo et al. | |
| Limited access to CE for nurses and midwives | DR Congo | PR | Bolan et al. | |
| Lack of policy on CE/renewal of skills | Malawi | PR | Bream et al. | |
| Little CE for HWs on managing NR or newborn emergencies | The Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. | |
| No CE for midwives | Mongolia | PR | Kildea et al. | |
| Lack of coordination of CPD of HWs, in past CPD not mandatory for MWs and absence of quality control over CPD | Liberia | PR | Michel-Schuldt et al. | |
| 4. Insufficient and inequitable distribution of HWs, heavy workload | Insufficient HWs in general | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. |
| Malawi | PR | Bream et al. | ||
| Tanzania | PR | Nyamtema et al. | ||
| Lack of HWs in primary health care/district hospitals | Nepal | PR | Allen and Jeffrey54 | |
| Insufficient NICU staff | Thailand | PR | Jirapaet et al. | |
| Lack of specialized nursing staff for neonatal care and sick newborns | SE Asia (4 countries) | PR | Martinez et al. | |
| Solomon Islands | PR | Tosif et al. | ||
| India | PR | Neogi et al. | ||
| Acute nursing shortage in newborn units | Kenya | PR | Nzinga et al. | |
| Kenya | PR | Aluvaala et al. | ||
| Shortage of HWs with neonatal training | Rwanda | PR | Ntigurirwa et al. | |
| Low number of HWs compounded by uneven distribution. | Indonesia | Report | National Research Council | |
| Poor distribution in rural/remote areas | Nepal | PR | Allen and Jeffrey | |
| Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. | ||
| India | PR | Fischer et al. | ||
| Heavy workload for existing staff | India | PR | Amin et al. | |
| Cambodia | PR | Ith et al. | ||
| India | PR | Morgan et al. | ||
| Gap filling with lower-level staff | Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | |
| 5. Poor retention, rotation out, absenteeism | Poor retention of HWs due to (examples)
- Deaths of HWs from HIV - Rural-urban migration - External brain drain - Attrition to private sector and non-governmental organizations | Tanzania | PR | Nyamtema et al. |
| Rwanda | PR | Ntigurirwa et al. | ||
| India | PR | Neogi et al. | ||
| Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. | ||
| Absenteeism | India | PR | Neogi et al. | |
| Tanzania | PR | Nyamtema et al. | ||
| Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | ||
| Rotation /transfer of neonatal nurses
- To other units - To other facilities | India | PR | Dewez et al. | |
| Ghana | PR | Elikplim Pomevor and Adomah-Afari | ||
| Rwanda | PR | Ntigurirwa et al. | ||
| 6. Poor work environment including: low salary; bad housing; lack of supplies, medications, equipment, electricity, and water; and poor safety and infrastructure | Low salary and irregular payment | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. |
| Cambodia | PR | Ith et al. | ||
| Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | ||
| Poor accommodations | Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. | |
| Lack of safety on the job
- Lack of protective equipment - Fear theft, assaults, gender-based violence, assault by families | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. | |
| Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. | ||
| India | PR | Morgan et al. | ||
| Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | ||
| Lack of equipment, essential drugs, supplies | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. | |
| Southeast Asia (4 countries) | PR | Martinez et al. | ||
| Ethiopia | PR | Haile-Mariam et al. | ||
| India | PR | Morgan et al. | ||
| Lack of tech support, delays in repair | Solomon Islands | PR | Tosif et al. | |
| Ward setup as barrier to care | India | PR | Neogi et al. | |
| Malawi | PR | Bream et al. | ||
| 7. Limited and poor supervision | Limited capacity for routine supervision | Lao PDR | PR | Horiuchi et al. |
| No on-site mentors or technical support for MWs with limited skills | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. | |
| Lack of clinical supervision in NICU | Thailand | PR | Jirapaet et al. | |
| Supervision punitive, no feedback given, lack of confidentiality | Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | |
| Problems remain unsolved after supervisory visits | Lao PDR | PR | Horiuchi et al. | |
| 8. Low morale, poor motivation and attitude, dissatisfaction | Poor conditions, salaries, lack of incentives | Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. |
| Lack of career ladder and promotion opportunities for HWs | Nigeria | PR | Adegoke et al. | |
| Mongolia | PR | Kildea et al. | ||
| Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | ||
| Burnout and stress, overwhelmed by workload and patient numbers | India | PR | Amin et al. | |
| India | PR | Dewez et al. | ||
| Powerless over work environment, lack of control over transfers | Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | |
| India | PR | Dewez et al. | ||
| Low morale from high mortality of patients and inability to provide good care due to poor conditions | Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. | |
| India | PR | Dewez et al. | ||
| Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | ||
| 9. Weaknesses of policy, regulations, management, leadership, governance, and funding | Lack of policy and regulatory frameworks for neonatal care and clinical protocols | Ghana | PR | Elikplim Pomevor and Adomah-Afari |
| Cambodia | PR | Ith et al. | ||
| Limited scope of practice for MWs, not in line with international scope of practice | Mongolia | PR | Kildea et al. | |
| No nationally accepted competency standards for MWs and nurses | Mongolia | PR | Kildea et al. | |
| Indonesia | Report | National Research Council | ||
| Lack of parity between public and faith-based workers' salaries | Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | |
| Absence of staffing norms by facility level | Ghana | Report | Ministry of Health Ghana30 | |
| Nonrecognition by management of need for ICU-like ratios in neonatal care units | India | PR | Dewez et al. | |
| Lack of support by hospital management team, facility leadership, or authorities | India | PR | Dewez et al. | |
| India | PR | Fischer et al. | ||
| Lack of job descriptions, neonatal guidelines, or orientation in newborn units | Kenya | PR | Nzinga et al. | |
| Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | ||
| India | PR | Campbell-Yeo et al. | ||
| Low productivity by HWs | Tanzania | PR | Nyamtema et al. | |
| Unsupportive management, inflexible work schedules | Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | |
| HR deficiencies at management level resulting in inefficient management, particularly related to budgeting | Lao PDR | PR | Sychareun et al. | |
| Nonprioritization of newborn health by policy makers in past | Ghana | Report | Ministry of Health Ghana | |
| Weak professional associations that do not improve conditions of HWs | Tanzania | PR | Prytherch et al. | |
| Inadequate funding in national budgets for neonatal care (public sector) | Uganda | PR | Mbonye et al. | |
| Tanzania | PR | Nyamtema et al. | ||
| Gambia | PR | Cole-Ceesay et al. | ||
| 10. Structural and contextual barriers | Lack of recognition of newborn specialty care requirements | India | PR | Campbell-Yeo et al. |
| Lack of community perception of neonatal disease burden | Nepal | PR | Allen and Jeffrey | |
| Neglect of female newborns | India | PR | Morgan et al. | |
| Child-bearing women lack power to determine care-seeking behavior in emergencies | Nepal | PR | Brunson |
Abbreviations: CE, continuing education; CPD, continuing professional development; ENC, essential newborn care; HRH, human resources for health; HW, health worker; ICU, intensive care unit; MW, midwife; NB, newborn; NICU, neonatal intensive care unit; NR, neonatal resuscitation; PR, peer-reviewed.