Author:
Schoo Adrian M,Boyce Rosalie A,Ridoutt Lee,Santos Teresa
Abstract
Workforce planning methodologies for the allied
health professions are acknowledged as rudimentary
despite the increasing importance of these
professions to health care across the spectrum of
health services settings. The objectives of this
study were to (i) identify workload capacity measures
and methods for profiling allied health workforce
requirements from a systematic review of the
international literature; (ii) explore the use of these
methods in planning workforce requirements; (iii)
identify barriers to applying such methods; and
(iv) recommend further action.
Future approaches to workforce planning were
explored through a systematic review of the literature,
interviews with key stakeholders and focus
group discussions with representatives from the
different professional bodies and health agencies
in Victoria.
Results identified a range of methods used to
calculate workload requirements or capacity. In
order of increasing data demands and costliness
to implement, workload capacity methods can be
broadly classified into four groups: ratio-based,
procedure-based, categories of care-based and
diagnostic or casemix-based. Despite inherent
limitations, the procedure-based measurement
approach appears to be most widely accepted.
Barriers to more rigorous workforce planning
methods are discussed and future directions
explored through an examination of the potential
of casemix and mixed-method approaches.
Cited by
22 articles.
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