Are Sustainable Health Workforces Possible? Issues and a Possible Remedy

Author:

Rees Gareth H1ORCID,James Rosemary2ORCID,Samadashvili Levan3,Scotter Cris4

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Universidad ESAN, Lima 33, Peru

2. Institute for Global Health, University College, London WC1E 6BT, UK

3. Innovations and Reforms Center, Tbilisi 0198, Georgia

4. WHO Regional Office for Europe, 2400 Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

The 2020–2022 period of the global COVID-19 pandemic exposed the fact that many countries health systems had inadequate health workforce availability. This is despite sustainable health workforces being critical to health service and healthcare delivery, an acknowledgement that drove the significant investment and focus on health workforce development over the previous two decades. As such, this review article discusses health workforce governance and planning, notes its weaknesses, and identifies some of the barriers to the implementation of health workforce policy making and planning and the achievement of sustainable health workforces. Important is the recognition that health workforce planning is long-term in nature, while health workforce decision-making processes are dominated by political processes that have much shorter time frames. The article concludes by offering the approach of backcasting to overcome this dichotomy.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction

Reference68 articles.

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2. (2022, July 03). European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies COVID-19 Health System Response Monitor (HSRM). Available online: https://eurohealthobservatory.who.int/monitors/hsrm/overview.

3. Infection and mortality of healthcare workers worldwide from COVID-19: A systematic review;Bandyopadhyay;BMJ Glob. Health,2020

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