Called
'Treat, Train, Retain', the plan is an important component of WHOs overall
efforts to strengthen human resources for health and to promote comprehensive
national strategies for human resource development across different disease
programmes. The plan is also part of WHO's work to promote universal access to
HIV/AIDS services. Through its HIV/AIDS Programme, WHO is playing a central role
in making the goal of universal access a reality.
Fifty-seven
countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia (particularly
Bangladesh
,
India
, and
Indonesia
) face crippling shortages of health workers. WHO estimates that more than four
million health workers are needed to fill the gap. Sub-Saharan
Africa
faces the greatest challenges. With 11 percent of the world's population and
almost 64 percent of all people living with HIV, the region has only 3 percent
of the world's health workers. Globally, health workers are also concentrated in
urban areas, leaving shortages in rural areas.
In
sub-Saharan
Africa
and elsewhere, the HIV/AIDS epidemic is contributing to health worker
shortages. HIV/AIDS is an emerging source of mortality, loss of productivity and
demoralisation among health workers. HIV/AIDS also has changed the way young
people view health work, making it a less desirable career choice and leading to
a lack of health workers trained to prevent and treat AIDS. In addition, many
health workers trained in developing world health systems leave their jobs (or
countries) for better-paying jobs in wealthy countries, in bigger cities or at
non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
WHO
has a unique role to play in helping countries mount an effective, comprehensive
and sustainable response to the AIDS epidemic, said Dr. Anarfi Asamoa-Baah,
Assistant Director-General of WHO. The shortage of health workers is
devastating public health systems, particularly in the developing world, and it
is one of the most significant challenges we face in preventing and treating
HIV. WHO is launching Treat, Train, Retain to confront this crisis.
WHOs
Treat, Train, Retain plan provides a much-needed boost to national health
systems that will have an impact far beyond HIV/AIDS, remarked Dr Sigrun
Mogedal, the Norwegian governments Ambassador for HIV/AIDS. By increasing
the number of well-trained, healthy and motivated health workers, the plan will
provide significant benefit to health systems generally.
The
Treat, Train, Retain plan will be implemented under the umbrella of the
Global Health Workforce Alliance, hosted by WHO, which was established in May
2006. The
Alliance
is a partnership of governments, aid agencies, civil society groups and
multilateral organizations.
"'Treat,
Train, Retain' draws on the growing body of evidence and experience of what
works in improving the performance of the health workforce," said Dr
Francis Omaswa, Executive Director of the Global Health Workforce Alliance.
"It will accelerate the adoption of best practices on critical issues like
the increased roles and responsibilities of community health workers in
combating HIV/AIDS and promoting better health at household and community
level."
'Treat,
Train, Retain' will focus on those countries most severely affected by HIV/AIDS,
and incorporates a menu of options that countries can adapt to their specific
needs. WHO estimates that it will cost a minimum of US7.2 billion over the next
five years to implement the plan in the 60 countries with the highest HIV
burden, and it could cost substantially more up to US14 billion. This
corresponds to an annual per capita cost of approximately US0.60 in the
countries concerned, or between two percent and five percent of the levels of
health expenditure typically found in low-income countries.
'Treat'
Although
health workers are at the frontline of national HIV/AIDS programmes, they often
do not have adequate access to HIV/AIDS services themselves. The 'Treat'
component of the plan represents a full package of HIV/AIDS prevention,
treatment and care services that should be made available to health workers on a
priority basis and tailored specifically to their needs. These include:
  
Specially designed awareness and anti-stigma and discrimination
campaigns
  
Testing and counselling services
  
Priority access to antiretroviral treatment for health workers and
their families
  
Protection from HIV transmission in the health care environment,
including access to post-exposure prophylaxis
'Train'
The
'Train' aspect involves strategies for countries to expand the numbers of new
health workers and maximize the efficiency of the existing workforce. These
include:
  
Recruiting and training additional health workers
  
Shifting tasks from more- to less-specialised health workers (e.g.,
from specialists to physicians, physicians to nurses, and nurses to community
health workers and lay providers including people living with HIV)
  
Increasing the number of graduates by improving and expanding
pre-service training in medical and nursing schools, and incorporating
AIDS-specific training
  
Providing in-service training to health workers already in the
health system to empower and better equip them with the skills needed to more
effectively care for patients living with HIV/AIDS
'Retain'
'Retain'
relates to a set of interventions to help ensure that countries are able to keep
existing workers employed in the health system. These include:
  
Instituting policy changes, codes of practice and ethical
guidelines to minimize migration of health workers from low-income countries to
developed countries
  
Diminishing the draw of private-sector and NGO HIV/AIDS programmes
on workers in public health systems
  
Improving the quality of the workplace environment, including
establishing occupational health and safety procedures, reducing the risk of
contracting HIV and other blood-borne diseases and addressing workplace issues
such as stress and burnout
  
Supporting staff and families with HIV by guaranteeing job
security, prohibiting discrimination, providing social benefits and adjusting
work demands
  
Providing financial incentives, as well as non-financial incentives
such as career and training opportunities, transport and HIV treatment access
for family members
WHOs
Priority Action Steps
To
ensure the success of 'Treat, Train, Retain', WHO has identified the following
priority action steps:
  
Establish a special steering committee that will advocate for the
'Treat, Train, Retain' plan, guide the implementation of its activities, and
monitor progress
  
Provide guidance and technical assistance to national governments
for the implementation of the activities outlined in the 'Treat, Train, Retain'
plan
  
Promote global recognition of the health workforce as a 'vulnerable
group', with campaigns targeted specifically to the well-being of health workers
within the context of the HIV epidemic
  
Design and facilitate the implementation of a global agenda on task
shifting to expedite the worlds response to the human resource crisis
  
Advocate for financial incentives to retain health workers and
research potential options for non-financial incentives.
For
more information contact:
In Toronto:
Anne Winter,
WHO,  Telephone: +41 79 440 6011  
E-mail: wintera@who.int
Cathy Bartley,
WHO, 
Telephone: +44 7958 561 671  
E-mail: cathy.bartley@ukonline.co.uk
In Geneva:
Iqbal Nandra,
WHO,
  Telephone: +41 22 791 5589,
  
Mobile phone: +41 79 509 062,
E-mail: nandrai@who.int
Tunga Namjilsuren,
WHO, 
Telephone: +44 22 791 1073,
E-mail: namjilsurent@who.int