More Non-Physician Clinicians Will Boost African Healthcare Workforce
06/21/07
The use of more non-physician clinicians in sub-Saharan Africa could be a cost-effective way
to boost the healthcare workforce in the region, and help deliver specific projects such as
the planned expansion of HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment programmes. The findings
are reported in a Public Health study published early Online and in an upcoming edition of
The Lancet.
Professor Fitzhugh Mullan and Dr Seble Frehywot, George Washington University School
of Public Health and Health Services, Washington, DC, USA, and colleagues did an analysis
of numbers of "non-physician clinicians" (NPCs), and their various roles, in 47 sub-Saharan
African countries.
The authors say: "Many nations have a history of health-care provision by staff who are not
trained as physicians but who are capable of many of the diagnostic and clinical functions
of medical doctors." They add that this would include clinical officers, health officers, nurse
practitioners, and physician assistants.
They add: "The growing HIV/AIDS epidemic and the health targets established by the
Millennium Development Goals have brought global attention to the shortage of health
workers in Sub-Saharan Africa, and the necessary challenge of scaling-up the health
workforce."
The researchers found that roles of NPCs varied widely between countries, and in nine
countries numbers of NPCs equalled or exceeded numbers of fully trained physicians. All
NPCs did basic diagnosis and medical treatment, and some were trained in certain specialty
activities, such as caesarean section, opthamology, and anaesthesia.
Many NPCs were recruited from rural and poor areas, and worked in those same regions, and
many of them have a pivotal role in the implementation and maintenance of antiretroviral
treatment campaigns.
The authors conclude: "Low training costs, reduced training duration, and success in
rural placements suggest that NPCs could have substantial roles in the scale-up of health
workforces in sub-Saharan African countries, including for the planned expansion of
HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment programmes."
In an accompanying Comment, Dr Piya Hanvoravongchai, Department of Preventive and
Social Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand, says: "The crisis in the health
workforce in Africa needs urgent, systematic and collaborative action, and scaling up NPCs to
address health-workforce shortages is a promising solution that many countries are currently
pursuing.
"It is important that this rush towards actions is accompanied by active pursuit of evidence
and knowledge about the management of health workforces and systems."
(Author: http://www.lancet.com)
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