8 research outputs found
Forecast of Healthcare Facilities and Health Workforce Requirements for the Public Sector in Ghana, 2016–2026
Abstract
Background: Ghana is implementing activities towards universal health coverage (UHC) as well as the attainment of
the health-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the health sector by the year 2030. Aside lack of empirical
forecast of the required healthcare facilities to achieve these mandates, health workforce deficits are also a major threat.
We therefore modelled the needed healthcare facilities in Ghana and translated it into year-by-year staffing requirements
based on established staffing standards.
Methods: Two levels of modelling were used. First, a predictive model based on Markov processes was used to estimate
the future healthcare facilities needed in Ghana. Second, the projected healthcare facilities were translated into aggregate
staffing requirements using staffing standards developed by Ghana’s Ministry of Health (MoH).
Results: The forecast shows a need to expand the number/capacity of healthcare facilities in order to attain UHC. All
things being equal, the requisite healthcare infrastructure for UHC would be attainable from 2023. The forecast also
shows wide variations in staffing-need-availability rate, ranging from 15% to 94% (average being 68%) across the various
staff types. Thus, there are serious shortages of staff which are worse amongst specialists.
Conclusion: Ghana needs to expand and/or increase the number of healthcare facilities to facilitate the attainment of
UHC. Also, only about 68% of the health workforce (HWF) requirements are employed and available for service delivery,
leaving serious shortages of the essential health professionals. Immediate recruitment of unemployed but qualified health
workers is therefore imperative. Also, addressing health worker productivity, equitable distribution of existing workers,
and attrition may be the immediate steps to take whilst a long-term commitment to comprehensively address HWF
challenges, including recruitments, expansion and streamlining of HWF training, is pursued
A systematic review of Health Technology Assessment tools in sub-Saharan Africa: methodological issues and implications
Background
Health technology assessment (HTA) is mostly used in the context of high- and middle-income countries. Many “resource-poor” settings, which have the greatest need for critical assessment of health technology, have a limited basis for making evidence-based choices. This can lead to inappropriate use of technologies, a problem that could be addressed by HTA that enables the efficient use of resources, which is especially crucial in such settings. There is a lack of clarity about which HTA tools should be used in these settings. This research aims to provide an overview of proposed HTA tools for “resource-poor” settings with a specific focus on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).
Methodology
A systematic review was conducted using basic steps from the PRISMA guidelines. Studies that described HTA tools applicable for “resource-limited” settings were identified and critically appraised. Only papers published between 2003 and 2013 were included. The identified tools were assessed according to a checklist with methodological criteria.
Results
Six appropriate tools that are applicable in the SSA setting and cover methodological robustness and ease of use were included in the review. Several tools fulfil these criteria, such as the KNOW ESSENTIALS tool, Mini-HTA tool, and Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis but their application in the SSA context remains limited. The WHO CHOICE method is a standardized decision making tool for choosing interventions but is limited to their cost-effectiveness. Most evaluation of health technology in SSA focuses on priority setting. There is a lack of HTA tools that can be used for the systematic assessment of technology in the SSA context.
Conclusions
An appropriate HTA tool for “resource-constrained” settings, and especially SSA, should address all important criteria of decision making. By combining the two most promising tools, KNOW ESSENTIALS and Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis, appropriate analysis of evidence with a robust and flexible methodology could be applied for the SSA setting