Title: Human Resources for Health: Migration and Retention
1Human Resources for Health Migration and
RetentionÂ
- Yoswa M Dambisya
- University of Limpopo
- EQUINET Steering Committee
- Regional Research Coordinator, MoHProf
2Introduction
- HRH issues have been researched, defined
- Shortage-Migration, attrition, underproduction
- Imbalances skills mix, deployment
- Poor utilisation low productivity
- Weak HRH governance
- The strategies and solutions through which these
issues can be addressed have been researched,
defined and articulated - Limited demonstrable commitment that translates
into actions and results.
3Demand for health services/HRH
- Aging populations, increasing population growth
rates, and a growing burden of chronic and
non-communicable disease - Aging health workforce, inadequate funding to
support new recruits into the professions and
growth of other career opportunities for women - Internal and external migration, high attrition
(poor work environments, low professional
satisfaction and inadequate remuneration) - HIV and AIDS
- Weak political will to address these challenges
4African health worker paradoxes
- High disease burden, low HW density
- Macroeconomic constraints
- Inequity in HW distribution within countries,
globally - Increasing policy attention, limited routine data
- HW profiles and curricula vs. health profiles
- Inappropriate skills mixes
- Anti-mid-level HW posture
- High use of traditional HWs
- Poor recognition of community HWs
- From JLI 2004 EQUINET SC 2007
5Migration of HCWs
- Migration is not new, not confined to health
professionals not always negative - Urgent need to rapidly scale up health worker
supply to cover the 4.3 million shortage - Poverty, inequality and political instability
will continue to fuel migration - Managed migration has potential to benefit source
and destination countries as well as migrants and
patients - Why do health workers move?
6Global Conveyor Belt of Health Personnel
HEALTH SERVICES, HIGH INCOME COUNTRY
HEALTH SERVICES, MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY
PRIVATE SECTOR LOW INCOME COUNTRY
URBAN CLINIC
URBAN HOSPITAL
RURAL CLINIC IN LOW INCOME COUNTRY
Padrath et al 2003, EQUINET Discussion paper 3
7(No Transcript)
8Face of HRH Migration Zambia c.2005
- Migration the highest cause of attrition for
all heath cadres, more for Nurses - Resignations in Zambia's health sector could be
explained by recruitment in developed countries - Zambia lost more nurses to the UK, and other
countries than it produced - Between 2003 2004, Zambian General Nursing
Council processed 1222 applications for
Nurses/Midwives to work abroad compared to 994
nurses graduated.
9Impact on Health Service Delivery
- Due to HRH crisis Zambia could not guarantee the
provision of the basic health care package. - MDG targets not attainable.
- Zambia had inadequate staff to administer the
HIV/AIDS programmes efforts for ART programme
scale up stalled. - Hence need for health worker retention strategy
developed, with assistance from devt. partners
Netherlands, USAID/PEPFAR, GFATM.
10Dimensions of the challenge Zimbabwe
11PEPFAR Programme in Mozambique
- Flight from the public sector, internal brain
drain gtgtgtexternal brain drain - Loss of physicians from the public sector (N75),
the majority (54.7) with NGOs, others with
bilateral and multilateral donors(28.0) and the
private sector (17.3). - 44 (33 of 75) now work for institutions funded
primarily through PEPFAR. - Loss of senior managers and public health
specialists.. ?effects on public sector
management.
12Why retention of health workers?
- Training costly, time consuming, trainee service
not certain - Direct and knock-on costs
- Systems loss of institutional memory, loss of
morale for remaining workers, increased workload - Community care seeking at higher levels,
unmanaged disease - Retention signals valuing health workers
- Retention cheaper than replacement
13Retention an Equity issue
- Service in areas of greatest need poor
infra-structure, rural, remote. - Service to poor populations, limited access to
health care, unable to pay for private health
care. - Incentives to attract and retain skilled
personnel in rural, underserved areas ?
pro-equity measure.
14Opportunities
- More political commitment at higher levels
- HRH topical issue at country, regional global
levels - Recognized requirement for national health policy
strategies - Urgency to achieve the MDGs
- Global initiatives- e.g.GAFTM, GAVI, GHWA, IHP
- Advocacy for multi-sectoral,coordinated
approaches to solving HRH issues -
15Resolutions of ECSA Health Ministers
- Resolution on improving conditions of service and
protecting the rights of workers who emigrate
(2002) Improving quality of care by improving
training of health workers (2004) The need to
improve retention of health workers, improving
leadership and governance for better health
worker and health systems performance (2004)
Strengthening HRIS ? inform retention and
migration (2006) - 2008 and 2009 Even more comprehensive ones
16Financial non financial incentives used in ESA
- NON FINANCIAL
- Career paths and recognition
- Training opportunities scholarships, study
leave, skills enhancement, research opportunities
- Assistance with housing, schooling, transport,
child care, food. - Working conditions Improved facilities,
conditions of service, security. - Health coverage ART, insurance
- Management Strategic planning,
- HRIS, open appraisal systems, supervision
-
- FINANCIAL
- Salary top ups
- Differential salary levels for health vs other
civil servants - Scarce skills and rural allowance
- Permitting dual practice
- Reasonable access to loans (car, housing)
- Per diems, sitting allowances
17Mkapa Fellowship Remuneration package
18Success factors for retention Strategies
- Linked to longer term strategic planning
- Consultation with and input from HCWs
- Immediate signals through financial incentives
- Longer term stability through non financial
incentives - Sustainability of funding SWAp vs project
specific funding - Monitoring and evaluation
- Evidence used for feedback periodic review.
19Issues arising from ESA retention schemes
- Impacts of targeting areas of most critical
shortage vs universal application of incentives
across grades - Measures to minimise destabilisation and consult
workforce (between cadres between facility type) - Systems to support incremental expansion
planning, management, monitoring, adjusting - Building on existing and working (district-level)
initiatives - Preference for simpler unambiguous systems
- Consistency with wider HR and health sector
strategies
20Challenges Engagement with Diaspora HRH
- Numbers and whereabouts often unknown
- Lack of mechanisms for re-absorption of returning
health workers (registration, CPD requirements) - Lack of capacity to absorb them rigid staffing
structures - Hostility towards those who left and wish to
return - Unrealistic expectations on part of returning
health workers - The stick factors.
21Other options explored
- Short-term return teaching, specific clinical
services (e.g. surgical camps) - Support for health facilities in home country
equipment, telemedicine - Participate in training external examiners,
visiting lectureships, joint research projects - High level advocacy through alumni associations
Old Boysnetworks - Examples from the audience
22UK registered charity, established in 1997
exclusively for charitable, educational and
scientific purposes. Â Recent projects have
included the provision of medical books to
Nigerian Universities, and the donation of a
truckload of medical equipment to primary care
centres in Nigeria.
23Association of South African Nurses in the UK
(ASANUK)
- Enable health services in South Africa to benefit
from the knowledge, skills and participation of
South African nurses in the UK. - Specifically Establish a working partnership
with relevant organisations in SA UK to
facilitate - Contribution to healthcare policy and service
development in South Africa - The sharing of specialist clinical knowledge and
information through, for example, joint seminars
and exchange visits.
24ECSA HC HRH Strategy 2008-2012
- Strengthening HR management approaches based on
best practices, including programmes on health
worker health, productivity and efficiency,
retention strategies and responses to migration - Member stated to
- Develop and implement country-specific responses
to health worker migration. - Secretariat to
- Work with member states to conduct country level
HRH retention and migration studies
25- Mobility of Health professionals to and from the
EU - Lead institution WIAD IOM one of the major
partners - 25 country studies, 6 African countries
- Angola, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco and South
Africa - African component coordinated by IOM Pretoria
IOM also responsible for Asia, and for
publication dissemination.
26Acknowledgements
- EQUINET, ECSA-HC, SIDA, University of Namibia.
- Colleagues at University of Limpopo
- Colleagues from IOM, and the MoH Prof Group.