Reviews
Payment for Performance (P4P): International Experience and a Cautionary Proposal for Estonia
Incentives such as P4P can be very powerful in their effects. Caution in their design and deployment is essential. However, ignoring their potential would be unwise, as they offer the possibility of improving value for money for taxpayers and patients. The first section of the paper will review evidence of common provider problems in all health care systems and their implications for introducing a P4P system. This will be followed by a review of P4P reforms in the United Kingdom and United States in particular. [from author]
4 reads
Using Human Resource for Health Data: Health Policy and Program Planning Examples from Four African Countries
Côte d'Ivoire | Information Systems | Knowledge Management | Lesotho | Malawi | Policy | Reviews | Zambia
This paper addresses the issue of data use for HRH policy-making. It will provide valuable information to the body of literature available to policy-makers and their development partners as they grapple with the development and implementation of workable HRH policies. [from summary]
29 reads
Ghana: Implementing a National Human Resources for Health Plan
Ghana addresses its serious health workforce shortage and consequent issues with health service delivery through a new human resources strategic plan developed to guide scale-up from 2007 to 2011. [from abstract]
138 reads
Can Working with the Private For-Profit Sector Improve Utilization of Quality Health Services by the Poor?: A Systematic Review of the Literature
This paper is a systematic literature review on the effectiveness of working with private for-profit providers to reach the poor. [adapted from abstract]
76 reads
Experience of the Latin America and Caribbean Observatory of Human Resource for Health
This document review the Observatory of Human Resources in Health in the Health Sector Reform Processes in Latin America and Caribbean, which is a cooperative initiative among the countries of the Americas aimed at producing information and knowledge in order to improve human resource policy decisions as well as contributing to human resoures development within the health sector on the basis of sharing experiences among countries. [adapted from author]
88 reads
Faith-Based Models for Improving Maternal and Newborn Health
This document explores some FBO health networks and facility-based services in Uganda and Tanzania. A pilot project in the Kasese District of Uganda illustrates how protestant, catholic and muslim health care providers and communities can work together from household-to-hospital levels to improve health outcomes. [from author]
210 reads
Tuberculosis: Infection Control/Exposure Control Issues for Oral Healthcare Workers
This article reports on a comprehensive review of literature with special emphasis on TB infection-control issues in the oral healthcare setting. The aim is to present the essential elements of an infection control/exposure control plan for the oral healthcare setting with emphasis on tuberculosis. [adapted from author]
132 reads
Mapping of Community Based Distribution Programs in Uganda
The mapping exercise illustrated in this report was conducted to inform and support the efforts of the Ugandan Ministry of Health to increase the contraceptive prevalence through enhanced community-based distribution (CBD) of family planning. The specific objectives of the exercise were to determine the historical and current coverage of CBD of family planning services in Uganda, by both governmental and nongovernmental programs, and to identify potential districts for scaling up these services. [adapted from summary]
117 reads
Myths, Masks and Stark Realities: Traditional African Healers, HIV/AIDS Narratives and Patterns of HIV/AIDS Avoidance
This paper presents field narratives selected as illustrations of mythologising and masking in popular responses to HIV/AIDS in South Africa. The stories appear in the context of traditional health practitioners and the testimony of the healers is used to demonstrate the ways in which they interpret these narratives, and seek to challenge them.2 The examination then re-assesses these accounts, and the healers’ responses to them, in relation to the antipathy that exists between western medicine and traditional healing in the context of HIV/AIDS. [introduction]
144 reads
Review of Codes and Protocols for the Migration of Health Workers
This is a review of current multi-lateral agreements, codes of practice, bilateral agreements, regional agreements, and strategies and position statements that govern the migration of health workers from ESA (East and Southern African) countries. The main purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the current situation in ESA. [from executive summary]
104 reads
Case Study of Community Health Workers Engaged in Primary Health Care in Sri Lanka
The paper describes the primary health care achievements of the country with respect to the current status of the community health care workers, factors which contributed to their achievements and how their roles and responsibilities can be modified to face the future challenges. [from abstract]
169 reads
Telemedicine: a Need for Ethical and Legal Guidelines in South Africa
Telemedicine is viewed as a new way of offering medical services. It is seen as a means of overcoming the growing shortage of health practitioners in developing countries. The aim of this paper is to highlight the need for the formulation of guidelines for the ethical practice of telemedicine in South Africa. [from abstract]
101 reads
Capacity Planning in Health Care: a Review of the International Experience
In this policy brief, we review approaches to capacity planning, a crucial component of health care governance. By concentrating on a diverse selection of countries, we aim to show a range of approaches to health care financing and organization, since both of these factors have an impact on approaches to capacity planning. [adapted from introduction]
205 reads
Financial Incentives, Healthcare Providers and Quality Improvements: a Review of the Evidence
This study reviews the healthcare literature that examines the effect of financial incentives on the behaviour of healthcare organisations and individuals with respect to the quality of care they deliver to consumers. Its purpose is to provide guidance to policy-makers in government and decision-makers in the private sector in their efforts to improve quality of care through payment reforms. [adapted from summary]
229 reads
Strengthening Management in Low-Income Countries: Lessons from Uganda: a Case Study on Management of Health Services Delivery
Health Sector Managers | Human Resources Management | Reviews | Service Delivery | Staff Performance | Uganda
In an initiative to collate experiences on management development in low resource settings, WHO carried out case studies to explore management development approaches and how these impacted managerial and service delivery performance. [adapted from author]
164 reads
Public Policy and Franchising Reproductive Health: Current Evidence and Future Directions
This guide offers policymakers and researchers the latest evidence on private-provider networks and franchises, lessons learned in the field, and policy recommendations on how to mobilize private-provider networks and health franchises to help address reproductive health care needs in developing countries. [adapted from publisher]
198 reads
Past, Present and Future: Experiences and Lessons from Telehealth Projects
This article focuses on the field of telemedicine in developing countries and its role in improving health, using examples from the experience of the International Development Resource Centre. [adapted from publisher]
209 reads
Teamwork in Healthcare: Promoting Effective Teamwork in Healthcare in Canada
A healthcare system that supports effective teamwork can improve the quality of patient care, enhance patient safety, and reduce workload issues that cause burnout among healthcare professionals. To support the movement to make teamwork a reality, this report was commissioned to outline the characteristics of an effective team, how to measure its effectiveness, what interventions have been successful in implementing and sustaining teamwork in healthcare, lessons from other settings and countries, and the barriers to implementation in Canada. [adapted from executive summary]
590 reads
Options and Challenges for Converging HIV and Sexual and Reproductive Health Services in India: Findings from an Assessment in Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra, and Uttar Pradesh
The report aims to share findings from an assessment to explore how access to critical services for populations at risk of HIV and unintended pregnancy can be strengthened by converging HIV and sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services under the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) and the National Aids Control Programme (NACP). The report provides information on the demand and opportunities for and the challenges of implementing HIV and SRH convergence in four states—Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra, and Uttar Pradesh. [adapted from executive summary]
184 reads
Consultancy Report on the Regulation of Allied Health Professions (AHPs) in ECSA Region
This report provides inforation on the potential establishment of regulatory bodies for allied health professionals in the ECSA region. It introduces the concept of regulation and the traditional methods of regulation, discusses the contextual issues, outlines five possible regulatory models, provides some draft model legislative provisions to regulate AHPs, and describes how to establish and implement a regional body. [adapted from author]
160 reads
South African Health Review 2007
This edition focuses on the role of the private sector, a part of the health system that has not previously been accorded extensive coverage in the SAHR. The contrast between the public and private sectors remains stark in many facets and the deepening inequity is cause for profound concern. The significance of the private sector cannot be underestimated both with regard to its potential contribution to the health and well-being of this country’s people, as well as its role in drawing resources (financial and human) from the public sector. [from foreword] Chapter 6 provides an overview of health information systens in the private health sector from a legilateive and operational perspective.
240 reads
Cross-Sectional Descriptive Study Investigating the Career Choices of School Leavers in Relation to Nursing and What Influences Those Choices
Nurses | Recruitment | Reviews | South Africa
The nurse is the single most important frontline health worker. Without nurses the clinics, community health centres and hospitals cannot function. It is therefore critical that nurse education and the supply of nurses form an integral part of transformation of health services in South Africa. According to the Department of Health there is a need to significantly increase the production of all categories of nurses in order to fulfil the requirements of South Africa. Attracting new recruits to the profession is an integral part of increasing production. It is for this reason that a study was undertaken to assess the attitudes of school leavers towards taking up nursing as a profession, and the reasons for these attitudes.
264 reads
Moving Towards Best Practice: Documenting and Learning from Existing Community Health Care Worker Programmes
The objectives of the study were to assess the extent to which CHW deployment has been addressing important health priorities; document success stories and lessons, identify champions; understand the range of ways that CHW programmes have evolved in South Africa and compile recommendations and lessons learned to improve practice. [from executive summary]
447 reads
Evaluation of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Health Care Providers toward HIV-Positive Patients in Tanzania
This study conducted structured interviews with 204 health care providers in three public hospitals in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, to evaluate the prevalence of stigma and discrimination among providers toward people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHAs) and the factors associated with stigmatizing attitudes. Information on HIV/AIDS-related knowledge, perceived risk of infection, willingness to care, and availability of protective gear was also obtained. [from executive summary]
260 reads
Costs and Benefits of Health Worker Migration from East and Southern Africa (ESA): a Literature Review
The migration of health professionals from developing countries in general, and sub-Saharan African countries in particular, has become the subject of considerable theoretical and case study research attention in international migration and human resources for health (HRH) literature. This report is a review of all available literature on the costs and benefits of the migration of health workers from East and Southern African (ESA) countries to developed nations. [from executive summary]
297 reads
Community Health Workers: a Review of Concepts, Practice and Policy Concerns
In this paper we attempt to provide an overview of the concepts and practice of community health workers (CHWs) from across a range of (developing and developed) countries, and draw some insights into policy challenges that remain in designing effective CHW schemes, particularly in the Indian context. In the subsequent sections, we provide a review of the various ways in which community health workers have been deployed in different settings. [from introduction]
1344 reads
Impact of Home-Based Management of Malaria on Health Outcomes in Africa: a Systematic Review of the Evidence
Community Health Workers | Community Involvement | Journal Articles | Malaria | Reviews | Sub-Saharan Africa | Task Shifting
Home-based management of malaria (HMM) is promoted as a major strategy to improve prompt delivery of effective malaria treatment in Africa. The published literature was searched for studies that evaluated the health impact of community- and home-based treatment for malaria in Africa. [from abstract]
362 reads
Human Resources for Health Situation in Mozambique
This report reviews the literature, published and unpublished, available on HRH in Mozambique. It also carries out some secondary data analysis and presents data from interviews and focus group discussions with key informers and stakeholders. The study of the human resources situation in Mozambique followed a frame of reference that addressed key issues related to the context, professional policies, labour market, management of human resources, and performance and coping. [from executive summary]
247 reads
Acting Now to Overcome Tanzania's Greatest Health Challenge: Addressing the Gap in Human Resources for Health
The focus of McKinsey's research effort is on the HRH constraint, faced by many
developing countries, in absorbing development aid and scaling up urgently
needed health programs. HRH in this context is defined as the health workers
at the front line of healthcare service delivery. The field work necessary to
diagnose the problem and identify possible solutions has been initiated in
Tanzania. We believe these findings, accounting for certain differences, will be
broadly applicable to several developing countries.
515 reads
Improving Health Worker Performance: in Search of Promising Practices
This report was commissioned to describe experiences and to provide lessons learnt with respect to interventions to retain staff and improve their productivity, competence and responsiveness. [from summary]
434 reads

