Browse by Resource Type
Working with the Non-State Sector to Achieve Public Health Goals
The purpose of this paper is to begin to develop consensus about key challenges and effective strategies in working with the non-state sector to achieve public health goals. [Author’s description]
- 2288 reads
Tools for Planning and Developing Human Resources for HIV/AIDS and Other Health Services
The tools and guidelines collected in this book will assist health program managers, policymakers, and leaders to assess the impact of HIV/AIDS on the health workforce and its capacity to deliver and scale up HIV/AIDS services. The book provides materials to help decision-makers develop a strategy to mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS, for both a short-term emergency response and a longer-term plan to strengthen HRM systems. This compilation also includes a tool developed by the World Health Organization to help HIV/AIDS programs to achieve a more sustainable workforce appropriately trained to provide ART.
- 4136 reads
Contracting-Out Reproductive Health and Family Planning Services: Contracting Management and Operations
This primer introduces key aspects of contracting and summarizes key lessons from countries’ experiences in contracting-out. In doing so, it is intended to serve the practical needs of contracting practicioners in developing countries that are considering contracting as a way to deliver RH/FP services. Intended users include country-level decision makers, contract operation managers, and mission officers and advisers from donor agencies. [publisher’s description]
- 2499 reads
Using Mystery Clients: A Guide to Using Mystery Clients
Mystery clients are trained people (usually community members) who visit program facilities in the assumed role of clients, and then report (by completing a survey or through an interview) on their experience. They might be used in an effort to avoid the bias in the service delivery process that often results from having service transactions observed. Mystery clients can also serve to gather a sufficient number of observations of service transactions when the actual volume of service visits is low. [publisher’s description]
- 3043 reads
Involving Young People in the Care and Support of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Zambia
Horizons, in collaboration with CARE International and Family Health Trust, conducted a quasiexperimental intervention study to determine which care and support needs of people living with HIV and AIDS and their families could be met by trained youth, and to establish whether youth engaged in formalized care and support activities would increase their adoption of protective behaviors or reduce the stigma faced by members of AIDS-affected households.
The study was conducted in semi-urban and rural communities in two provinces of northern Zambia located 700 to 1,000 kilometers from Lusaka.
- 5135 reads
World Health Statistics 2006
World Health Statistics 2006 presents the most recent statistics since 1997 of 50 health indicators for WHO’s 192 Member States. This second edition of World Health Statistics includes an expanded set of statistics, with a particular focus on equity between and within countries. It also introduces a section with 10 highlights in global health statistics for the past year. [publisher’s description]
The report includes a chapter on Health Systems which provides key HRH statistical data.
- 1792 reads
Action against Sexual Harassment at Work in Asia and the Pacific
This report, Action against Sexual Harassment at Work in Asia and the Pacific, is intended to serve as a technical report for discussion at the ILO Regional Tripartite Seminar on Action against Sexual Harassment at Work, to be held in Penang, Malaysia from 2 to 4 October, 2001.
- 5440 reads
Skilled Migration: Healthcare Policy Options
The loss of skilled personnel to rich countries is a major concern for many developing countries today. However, large numbers of people from developing countries are also being trained overseas and, of those trained at home, many cannot be absorbed productively into their economies of origin. At the same time, the association between the presence or absence of health personnel and the health status of a population is seen as simplistic and a range of other factors are addressed. This Briefing examines the case for a two-tiered health training system, one for global markets and the other for local markets.
- 2047 reads
Guidelines for Establishing Community-Led Antiretroviral Treatment through a Human Capacity Development Approach
The following guidelines have been developed by a working group of practitioners drawn from clinics, hospitals, congregations and communities. They are intended for use by practitioners from the congregation, community, clinic, and other partners in local responses which are incorporating ART. [Description from preface]
- 6726 reads
NCQA’s Recognition Programs: A Proven, Cost-Effective Method to Improve Clinical Quality and Its Applicability to Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Health systems in industrialized countries are having success with new approaches for evaluating and improving care delivered by clinicians in ambulatory care settings. Described herein is a program which awards recognition to individual physicians or physician groups who deliver high-quality, cost-effective care. [from author’s description]
- 1905 reads
Strengthening Human Resources Information Systems
A brief description of why strengthening human resources informations systems (HRIS) is important, what constitutes an HRIS, and what The Capacity Project has accomplished and learned in this area.
- 4519 reads
Improving Female Recruitment, Participation, and Retention Among Peer Educators in the Geração BIZ Program in Mozambique
In response to the under-representation of female peer educators in the Geração BIZ Program (GBP), an adolescent sexual and reproductive health program in Mozambique, an operational research study was used to test new strategies for improving recruitment, participation, and retention of female peer educators. The study tested an intervention model to increase the involvement and performance of girls in the GBP.
- 5524 reads
Do Lay Health Workers Improve Healthcare Delivery and Healthcare Outcomes?
Evidence Update is a two-page summary of a Cochrane Review of healthcare interventions relevant to people in low-income and middle income-countries. This issue reviews whether lay health workers improve health care delivery and health care outcomes.
- 2648 reads
Public Sector Nurses in Swaziland: Can the Downturn be Reversed?
The lack of human resources for health (HRH) is increasingly being recognized as a major bottleneck to scaling up antiretroviral treatment (ART), particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, whose societies and health systems are hardest hit by HIV/AIDS. In this case study of Swaziland, we describe the current HRH situation in the public sector. We identify major factors that contribute to the crisis, describe policy initiatives to tackle it and base on these a number of projections for the future. Finally, we suggest some areas for further research that may contribute to tackling the HRH crisis in Swaziland.
- 6895 reads
Not Enough There, Too Many Here: Understanding Geographical Imbalances in the Distribution of the Health Workforce
The objective of this paper is to offer a better understanding of the determinants of geographical imbalances in the distribution of health personnel, and to identify and assess the strategies developed to correct them.
- 2171 reads
ILO Nursing Personnel Convention No.149: Recognize Their Contribution, Address Their Needs
The relationship between poor conditions of employment and work of nursing personnel and shortages is complex. Consequences may include: increased patient morbidity and mortality; greater levels of violence in the workplace; reduced occupational safety and health for remaining personnel; high levels of job dissatisfaction with intention to quit; and unsustainable patterns of health worker migration from developing countries.The Nursing Personnel Convention articulates the kinds of provisions needed to address many of the identified problems. It must be implemented in the greatest number of countries in order to set decent standards of work, boost the professional and political profile of nursing personnel, and provide incentive for nursing personnel to remain in their jobs.
- 3602 reads
Gender Issues in Safety and Health at Work: Summary of an Agency Report
There are substantial differences in the working lives of women and men and this affects their occupational safety and health (OSH). The Community strategy on health and safety at work has mainstreaming, or integrating, gender into occupational safety and health activities as an objective. To support this, the Agency has produced a report examining gender differences in workplace injury and illness, gaps in knowledge and the implications for improving risk prevention. This factsheet summarizes the main findings. [adapted from publisher’s description]
- 2730 reads
Gender Issues in Safety and Health at Work: A Review
The aim of this report is not only to give a clear overview of gender differences in safety and health at work and how they arise, but also to provide information about what this means for prevention and how a gender-sensitive approach can be taken in occupational safety and health. [from preface]
- 3456 reads
Modified Population-to-Physician Ratio Method to Project Future Physician Requirement in Thailand
Imbalance in the cadre mix, number, distribution, and quality of health personnel are major concerns for health planners and policy makers. Many methods were developed and used to project future supply and requirement for health personnel. This paper modified the population-to-physician ratio method, by taking into account the specific characteristics of the Thai health care system, and of the future economic scenarios to project requirements of Thai physicians over the next twenty-five years. [from abstract]
- 5232 reads
Future Policy Options for HRH Production in the Ministry of Public Health, Thailand
Most human resources for health in developing countries are produced by highly subsidized public institutes. Due to inequity in basic education most health science students are from wealthier urban families. They tend to remain in urban areas after graduation, creating inequitable distribution of health personnel. At the same time the public education institutes are subject to strong bureaucratic inefficiency and usually no systematic quality control system. This paper analyses this situation in Thailand. [adapted from abstract]
- 5606 reads
Human Resource Development Through Continuous Improvement: a Case Study of Yasothorn Hospital, Thailand
Human Resource Development (HRD)is a very important yet very difficult component for effective health care delivery, especially in the public sector. Bureaucratic barriers, discontinuity, ineffective leadership, and lack of systematic approaches are major reasons for failures. A package of HRD strategies were introduced into Yasothon Hospital. This paper describes the detail of the implementation and evaluation of the results. [from abstract]
- 10454 reads
Survey of the Existing Health Workforce of Ministry of Health, Bangladesh
The objective of this study is to present and analyze different issues relating to the existing workforce in the health services of Bangladesh under the Ministry of Health. [from abstract]
- 5671 reads
Why Plan Human Resources for Health?
A roundtable discussion of the following questions: 1) Why attempt HRH planning? 2) What should be the objectives for HRH planning? 3) Why has HRH planning had limited success in the past? 4) Will these reasons for limited success continue in the future? 5) Even if HRH planning might be useful, why wouldn’t market forces be a better guide to policy? 6) If both HRH planning and market forces have their use, when should we choose one and when the other? [From author]
- 2212 reads
Conditions, Constraints, and Strategies for Increased Contribution of General Practitioners to the Health System in Thailand
This paper analyzes the present situation of general practitioners in the Thai health care system and the conditions under which their contribution could be strengthened. [from abstract]
- 2346 reads
Health Worker Benefits in a Period of Broad Civil Service Reform: The Philippine Experience
Developing countries that have to cope with pressures to reform their bureaucracies have to contend with increasing health worker benefits and salaries that are often intended to retain these health workers in government service. In the Philippines, national and local efforts in health have been forced to focus on guaranteeing some of these benefits, and local governments are feeling the financial limitations of their local funds. [from abstract]
- 3131 reads
Equivalence Determination of Qualifications and Degrees for Education and Training of Health Professions in Thailand
This study explores the details of the process leading to the equivalence determination of qualifications and degrees for the education and training of the health professions in Thailand. [from abstract]
- 7819 reads
Human Resource Indicators and Health Service Performance
This paper examines the use of human resource indicators to support management-led initiatives to improve health service efficiency and effectiveness. [from abstract]
- 2535 reads
We Need Respect: Experiences of Internationally Recruited Nurses in the UK
The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) commissioned this report into the experiences of internationally recruited nurses (IRNs) working in the UK. The study explores the motivations and experiences of IRNs in order to understand why overseas nurses come to work in the UK, what experiences they undergo and whether they plan to stay in the UK, return to their countries of origin or go to another country to work after a short period. [from executive summary]
- 18495 reads
Policy Responses to Skilled Migration: Retention, Return and Circulation
With globalisation trends, the emigration of highly skilled persons from developing countries has significantly increased. The implication of this movement of skilled labour (termed as “the brain drain”) has emerged as an important issue of international debate in recent years. The objective of the paper is to look at different possible policy responses which can minimize its adverse effects, and which can promote the sharing of gains between source and host countries. The paper focuses on three policy approaches: retention, return and circulation of skills. It argues that the best strategy to deal with the problem of loss of skilled labour is one based on the concept of circulation of skills, which yields mutual benefits for both sending and host countries.
- 3436 reads
International Migration, Health & Human Rights
This publication provides an overview of some of the key challenges for policy-makers in addressing the linkages between migration, health and human rights.The first section explains why we are addressing the issue of migration and health and what is meant by doing this through a human rights framework. It then explores some of the terminology used. The second section links the reasons why people migrate with the health and human rights implications of moving on the populations left behind. The third section considers the health implications for those on the move both in the context of public health as well as in relation to the health of the individual.
- 2639 reads