Feature story

Health workforce crisis limits AIDS response

29 February 2008

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The Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA) is convening the first ever Global Forum on Human Resources for Health in Kampala, Uganda from March 2-7, 2008.

The GHWA, hosted and administered by the World Health Organization (WHO), has been created to identify and implement solutions to the health workforce crisis. What is this crisis and how does it impact on the AIDS response?

Healthcare systems depend on trained staff

One of the major obstacles identified to scaling up access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support in a country is a weak national healthcare system.

The question of human resources for health is a critical factor in any effective response to AIDS. A shortage of trained health care workers, particularly in low and middle-income countries, presents a real challenge to the ability of a country to respond to the HIV prevention, treatment and care needs of their populations.

In parts of sub-Saharan Africa shortages are so acute that they limit the potential to scale up programmes aimed at achieving health-related Millennium Goals including the roll-out of treatment for AIDS. - World Health Assembly, 2005

WHO estimates that more than 4 million additional doctors, nurses, midwives, managers and public health workers are urgently needed to avert serious crises in health-care delivery in 57 countries around the world—26 of these in sub-Saharan Africa. WHO estimates that at least 1.3 billion people around the world lack access to even the most basic health care.

Insufficient human resources has been identified as a primary obstacle to the delivery of antiretroviral treatment and other HIV-related services in many countries in Eastern Europe, Africa and Asia. Many healthcare systems have poor availability and quality of pre- and post-test counselling, health education, home care, diagnosis and treatment of opportunistic infections.

Governments pledge to increase capacity

At the 2006 High Level Meeting on AIDS, UN Member States reaffirmed their commitment to fully implement the 2001 Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS and further strengthened international commitment on AIDS by:

“Pledging to increase capacity of human resources for health, and committing additional resources to low- and middle-income countries for the development and implementation of alternative and simplified service delivery models and the expansion of community-level provision of comprehensive AIDS, health and other social services.” However translating government commitment to increasing capacity into more health workers on the ground is a challenge of some complexity.

Balancing macroeconomic stability and staff retention

While AIDS funding has increased in recent years, simply pouring this into the healthcare system of a country to strengthen capacity is not the solution.

Most economists agree that a high rate of growth of a money supply causes a high rate of inflation - a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services in a given economy over a period of time.

Governments believe that fiscal and monetary policies – to keep inflation low - are needed to control and manage their economy to prevent potentially damaging sharp shocks and fluctuation in growth.

Low-income countries with high HIV-prevalence have to juggle the need to invest in their healthcare systems with a responsibility to maintain macroeconomic stability – nationally and regionally.

These economic policies include keeping salaries low and so constrain the hiring of the doctors, nurses, community health-care workers. Low salaries lead to low worker morale and low productivity and make it extremely difficult for some countries to retain their staff.

Open labour markets mean skilled professionals are migrating in record numbers to high-income countries, draining human capacity where it is most needed.

Global Forum on Human Resources for Health

Consensus is growing that this is a global crisis which calls for coordinated action.

The Global Health Workforce Alliance (GHWA) has been established to explore and implement solutions to this health workforce crisis. It is hosted and administered by the World Health Organization (WHO).

As a first step in the process, the GHWA are holding the first Global Forum on Human Resources for Health in Kampala this week. This meeting brings together government leaders, health and development professionals, civil society and academics from around the world who hope to consolidate a global movement on this.

Participants will explore solutions to improving education, training, and health sector management as well as looking at recent trends in migration.