Journal Articles
Family Planning Choices for Women with HIV
Women with HIV have much the same reasons to have children or to prevent pregnancy as everyone else, but they have important additional issues to consider. These women’s health care providers have the responsibility to help them make well-informed and well-considered choices and carry out their decisions with the least risk.
- 2321 reads
Discriminatory Attitudes of Health Workers Against People Living with AIDS in Nigeria
This study set out to characterise the nature and extent of discriminatory practices and attitudes in the health sector, and indicate possible contributing factors and intervention strategies. [from author]
- 3139 reads
Crisis in Human Resources for Health in the African Region
This edition covers topics such as: migration of skilled health workers, investing in human resources for health, strengthening human resources for health in Africa, and the economic cost of health professionals brain drain in the African region. [author’s description]
- 5269 reads
Tackling Malawi’s Human Resources Crisis
Since the late 1990s, Malawi’s public health services have appeared to be heading for collapse due to declining staffing levels. The government launched the Essential Health Package in 2004 to help improve the health of the population, which includes scaling-up HIV and AIDS-related services. The biggest challenge facing the initiative is improving human resource levels. [adapted from author]
- 2613 reads
Decision Criteria in Health Professionals Choosing a Rural Practice Setting: Development of the Careers in Rural Health Tracking Survey (CIRHTS)
Rural background and training have previously been found to increase the likelihood of rural practice. However, practitioners of many health professions remain in shortage in rural and remote Australia. This study builds on previous work in that it includes medical, nursing and allied health professions, considers the role of the health professional’s family in employment decisions, and includes a broader array of factors influencing employment preference and the preferred location of practice. The survey also examines when students might work in a rural area. [introduction]
- 1804 reads
Continuous and Integrated Health Care Services in Rural Areas: a Literature Study
This article presents the result of a literature review examining possible ways to improve healthcare services in rural areas. [from abstract]
- 1995 reads
What Are the Effects of Distance Management on the Retention of Remote Area Nurses in Australia?
Australian remote area nurses (RANs) are specialist advanced practice nurses. They work in unique, challenging and sometimes dangerous environments to provide a diverse range of healthcare services to remote and predominantly Aboriginal communities. There is an emerging skills gap in the remote nursing workforce as experienced and qualified RANs leave this demanding practice. There is a shortage of new nurses interested in working in these areas, and many of those who enter remote practice leave after a short time. Distance management was examined in order to gain a better understanding of its effects on the retention of RANs. Distance management in this context occurs when the health service’s line management team is located geographically distant from the workplace they are managing. [introduction]
- 5732 reads
Midwives' Competence: Is It Affected by Working in a Rural Location?
Rising health care costs and the need to consolidate expertise in tertiary services have led to the centralisation of services. In the UK, the result has been that many rural maternity units have become midwife-led. A key consideration is that midwives have the skills to competently and confidently provide maternity services in rural areas, which may be geographically isolated and where the midwife may only see a small number of pregnant women each year. Our objective was to compare the views of midwives in rural and urban settings, regarding their competence and confidence with respect to competencies identified as being those which all professionals should have in order to provide effective and safe care for low-risk women.
- 7710 reads
High Impact of Mobile Units for Mass HIV Testing in Africa
Despite the usefulness of voluntary counselling and testing centres implemented in Africa, their limited capacity does not allow for vast testing of the general population. Therefore, in order to increase the number of individuals tested for HIV with the aim of enhancing the scaling up, we developed a strategy based on bringing the healthcare package much closer to the people, by using mobile HIV testing units. We herein report the Cameroon experience of mobile HIV testing unit strategy, demonstrating its effectiveness in reaching a great number of individuals, including those without usual access to HIV testing facilities. [abstract]
- 2718 reads
Excessive Work Hours of Physicians in Training in El Salvador: Putting Patients at Risk
Recent studies involving physicians in training have shown that excessive work hours are associated with an increased rate of medical errors and adverse events. The problem of excessive work hours of physicians in training in El Salvador has political and economic roots that need to be addressed by politicians and public health policy makers. [adapted from author]
- 1763 reads
Health Professionals and Migration
Because of its inherent complexities, the migration of health workers benefits from multidisciplinary research: solutions must be informed by a better understanding of the perspectives and underlying motivations of the many stakeholders. [author’s description]
- 4138 reads
How Can Employment-Based Benefits Help the Nurse Shortage?
During a labor shortage, employment-based benefits can be used to recruit and retain workers. This paper provides data on the availability of benefits to registered nurses (RNs), reports on how health care leaders are approaching the provision of employment-based benefits for nurses, and considers what nurses have to say in focus groups about benefits. Because of the ongoing nurse shortage, many employers are trying to enhance the benefits they offer to support recruitment and retention efforts.
- 7599 reads
Internationally Recruited Nurses in London: a Survey of Career Paths and Plans
The paper reports on a survey of recently arrived international nurses working in London, to assess their demographic profile, motivations, experiences and career plans. [from abstract]
- 2105 reads
Outcomes of Variation in Hospital Nurse Staffing in English Hospitals: Cross-Sectional Analysis of Survey Data and Discharge Records
Despite growing evidence in the US, little evidence has been available to evaluate whether internationally, hospitals in which nurses care for fewer patients have better outcomes in terms of patient survival and nurse retention. The objectives of this article are to examine the effects of hospital-wide nurse staffing levels (patient-to-nurse ratios) on patient mortality, failure to rescue (mortality risk for patients with complicated stays) and nurse job dissatisfaction, burnout and nurserated quality of care. [from abstract]
- 2850 reads
Human Resource Planning and the Production of Health: a Needs-Based Analytical Framework
Traditional approaches to health human resource planning emphasize the effects of demographic change on the needs for health human resources. Planning requirements are largely based on the size and demographic mix of the population applied to simple population-provider or population-utilization ratios. We develop an extended analytical framework based on the production of heal care services and the multiple determinants of health human resource requirements. [from abstract]
- 4311 reads
International Nurse Recruitment in India
This paper describes the practice of international recruitment of Indian nurses in the model of a business process outsourcing of comprehensive training-cum-recruitment-cum-placement for popular destinations like the United Kingdom and United States through an agency system that has acquired growing intensity in India. [from abstract]
- 4973 reads
Potential of China in Global Nurse Migration
The purpose of this paper is to examine what is known about the nurse workforce and nursing education in China in order to assess the likely potential for nurse migration from China in the future. [from abstract]
- 1846 reads
Nurse Migration from a Source Country Perspective: Philippine Country Case Study
This case study provides information on Philippine nurse migration patterns and presents a sending-country perspective on the benefits and costs of this phenomenon. Our aim is to identify strategies that will ensure that international nurse migration is beneficial for both sending and receiving countries. [from abstract]
- 3814 reads
Migration of Nurses from Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review of Issues and Challenges
This paper was commissioned to identify and review reports, documents and data relating to nursing workforce dynamics in sub-Saharan Africa with the objective of analyzing, synthesizing, and presenting key information on nurse migration in the region. It reviews trends and impact of nurse migration derived from previously published work by various groups and reports to the High Level Forum on the millennium development goals on the human resources crisis. [from abstract]
- 2708 reads
Managed Migration: The Caribbean Approach to Addressing Nursing Services Capacity
This article intends to provide a contextual analysis of the Caribbean region with respect to forces shaping the current and emerging nursing workforce picture in the region; discuss country-specific case(s) within the Caribbean; and describe the Managed Migration Program as a potential framework for addressing regional and global nurse migration issues. [from abstract]
- 2814 reads
Nurse Migration: a Canadian Case Study
The objective of this article is to synthesize information about nurse migration in and out of Canada and analyze its role as a policy lever to address the Canadian nursing shortage. [from abstract]
- 1634 reads
International Recruitment of Nurses: Policy and Practice in the United Kingdom
This article synthesizes information about nurse migration into and out of the United Kingdom in the period to 2005, and assesses policy implications. [from abstract]
- 2421 reads
U.S. Nurse Labor Market Dynamics Are Key to Global Nurse Sufficiency
This article reviews estimates of U.S. nurse supply and demand, documents trends in nurse immigration to the United States and their impact on nursing shortage, and considers strategies for resolving the shortage of nurses in the United States without adversely affecting health care in lower-income countries. [from abstract]
- 2597 reads
Nurses on the Move: a Global Overview
The objective of this article is to look at nurse migration flows in the light of national nursing workforce imbalances, examine factors that encourage or inhibit nurse mobility, and explore the potential benefits of circular migration. [from abstract]
- 1770 reads
Initial Community Perspectives on the Health Service Extension Programme in Welkait, Ethiopia
The Health Service Extension Programme (HSEP) is an innovative approach to addressing the shortfall in health human resources in Ethiopia. It has developed a new cadre of Health Extension Workers (HEWs), who are charged with providing the health and hygiene promotion and some treatment services, which together constitute the bedrock of Ethiopia’s community health system. This study seeks to explore the experience of the HSEP from the perspective of the community who received the service. [from abstract]
- 2219 reads
Quality of Communication about Older Patients between Hospital Physicians and General Practitioners: a Panel Study Assessment
The main objectives of this study were to assess the quality of the written communication between physicians and to estimate the number of patients that could have been treated at primary care level instead of at a general hospital. [from abstract]
- 2060 reads
Salud Pública: Objeto de Conocimiento, Prácticas y Formación; Public Health: Knowledge, Practice and Training
This paper presents a discussion regarding public health’s main challenges in Latin America: knowledge of it, professional practice and training human resources. Emphasis is placed on three components: knowledge of public health, social practice and human resources training. [from abstract]
- 4557 reads
Contribution of International Health Volunteers to the Health Workforce in Sub-Saharan Africa
In this paper, we aim to quantify the contribution of international health volunteers (IHVs) to the health workforce in sub-Saharan Africa and to explore the perceptions of health service managers regarding these volunteers. [from abstract]
- 1715 reads
Human Resource Management in the Georgian National Immunization Program: a Baseline Assessment
Georgia’s health care system underwent dramatic reform after gaining independence in 1991. The decentralization of the health care system was one of the core elements of health care reform but reports suggest that human resource management issues were overlooked. The Georgian national immunization program was affected by these reforms and is not functioning at optimum levels. This paper describes the state of human resource management practices within the Georgian national immunization program in late 2004. [from abstract]
- 1858 reads
Developing a Nursing Database System in Kenya
The objective [of this report is] to describe the development, initial findings, and implications of a national nursing workforce database system in Kenya. [from abstract]
- 2523 reads