@article{96971, keywords = {General Medicine}, author = {Haakenstad A and Irvine CMS and Knight M and Bintz C and Aravkin AY and Zheng P and Gupta V and Abrigo MRM and Abushouk AI and Adebayo OM and Agarwal G and Alahdab F and Al-Aly Z and Alam K and Alanzi TM and Alcalde-Rabanal JE and Alipour V and Alvis-Guzman N and Amit AML and Andrei CL and Andrei T and Antonio CAT and Arabloo J and Aremu O and Ayanore MA and Banach M and Bärnighausen TW and Barthelemy CM and Bayati M and Benzian H and Berman AE and Bienhoff K and Bijani A and Bikbov B and Biondi A and Boloor A and Busse R and Butt ZA and Cámera LA and Campos-Nonato IR and Cárdenas R and Carvalho F and Chansa C and Chattu SK and Chattu VK and Chu D and Dai X and Dandona L and Dandona R and Dangel WJ and Daryani A and De Neve J and Dhimal M and Dipeolu IO and Djalalinia S and Do HT and Doshi CP and Doshmangir L and Ehsani-Chimeh E and El Tantawi M and Fernandes E and Fischer F and Foigt NA and Fomenkov AA and Foroutan M and Fukumoto T and Fullman N and Gad MM and Ghadiri K and Ghafourifard M and Ghashghaee A and Glucksman T and Goudarzi H and Gupta RD and Hamadeh RR and Hamidi S and Haro JM and Hasanpoor E and Hay SI and Hegazy MI and Heibati B and Henry NJ and Hole MK and Hossain N and Househ M and Ilesanmi OS and Imani-Nasab M and Irvani SSN and Islam SMS and Jahani MA and Joshi A and Kalhor R and Kayode GA and Khalid N and Khatab K and Kisa A and Kochhar S and Krishan K and Kuate Defo B and Lal DK and Lami FH and Larsson AO and Leasher JL and LeGrand KE and Lim L and Mahotra NB and Majeed A and Maleki A and Manjunatha N and Massenburg BB and Mestrovic T and Mini G and Mirica A and Mirrakhimov EM and Mohammad Y and Mohammed S and Mokdad AH and Morrison SD and Naghavi M and Ndwandwe DE and Negoi I and Negoi RI and Ngunjiri JW and Nguyen CT and Nigatu YT and Onwujekwe OE and Ortega-Altamirano DV and Otstavnov N and Otstavnov SS and Owolabi MO and Pakhare AP and Pepito VCF and Perico N and Pham HQ and Pigott DM and Pokhrel KN and Rabiee M and Rabiee N and Rahimi-Movaghar V and Rawaf DL and Rawaf S and Rawal L and Remuzzi G and Renzaho AMN and Resnikoff S and Rezaei N and Rezapour A and Rickard J and Roever L and Sahu M and Samy AM and Sanabria J and Santric-Milicevic MM and Saraswathy SYI and Seedat S and Senthilkumaran S and Serván-Mori E and Shaikh MA and Sheikh A and Silva DAS and Stein C and Stein DJ and Titova MV and Topp SM and Tovani-Palone MR and Ullah S and Unnikrishnan B and Vacante M and Valdez PR and Vasankari TJ and Venketasubramanian N and Vlassov V and Vos T and Yearwood JA and Yonemoto N and Younis MZ and Yu C and Zadey S and Zaman SB and Zerfu TA and Zhang Z and Ziapour A and Zodpey S and Lim SS and Murray CJL and Lozano R}, title = {Measuring the availability of human resources for health and its relationship to universal health coverage for 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019}, abstract = {

 

Background

Human resources for health (HRH) include a range of occupations that aim to promote or improve human health. The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the WHO Health Workforce 2030 strategy have drawn attention to the importance of HRH for achieving policy priorities such as universal health coverage (UHC). Although previous research has found substantial global disparities in HRH, the absence of comparable cross-national estimates of existing workforces has hindered efforts to quantify workforce requirements to meet health system goals. We aimed to use comparable and standardised data sources to estimate HRH densities globally, and to examine the relationship between a subset of HRH cadres and UHC effective coverage performance.

Methods

Through the International Labour Organization and Global Health Data Exchange databases, we identified 1404 country-years of data from labour force surveys and 69 country-years of census data, with detailed microdata on health-related employment. From the WHO National Health Workforce Accounts, we identified 2950 country-years of data. We mapped data from all occupational coding systems to the International Standard Classification of Occupations 1988 (ISCO-88), allowing for standardised estimation of densities for 16 categories of health workers across the full time series. Using data from 1990 to 2019 for 196 of 204 countries and territories, covering seven Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) super-regions and 21 regions, we applied spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression (ST-GPR) to model HRH densities from 1990 to 2019 for all countries and territories. We used stochastic frontier meta-regression to model the relationship between the UHC effective coverage index and densities for the four categories of health workers enumerated in SDG indicator 3.c.1 pertaining to HRH: physicians, nurses and midwives, dentistry personnel, and pharmaceutical personnel. We identified minimum workforce density thresholds required to meet a specified target of 80 out of 100 on the UHC effective coverage index, and quantified national shortages with respect to those minimum thresholds.

Findings

We estimated that, in 2019, the world had 104·0 million (95% uncertainty interval 83·5–128·0) health workers, including 12·8 million (9·7–16·6) physicians, 29·8 million (23·3–37·7) nurses and midwives, 4·6 million (3·6–6·0) dentistry personnel, and 5·2 million (4·0–6·7) pharmaceutical personnel. We calculated a global physician density of 16·7 (12·6–21·6) per 10 000 population, and a nurse and midwife density of 38·6 (30·1–48·8) per 10 000 population. We found the GBD super-regions of sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, and north Africa and the Middle East had the lowest HRH densities. To reach 80 out of 100 on the UHC effective coverage index, we estimated that, per 10 000 population, at least 20·7 physicians, 70·6 nurses and midwives, 8·2 dentistry personnel, and 9·4 pharmaceutical personnel would be needed. In total, the 2019 national health workforces fell short of these minimum thresholds by 6·4 million physicians, 30·6 million nurses and midwives, 3·3 million dentistry personnel, and 2·9 million pharmaceutical personnel.

Interpretation

Considerable expansion of the world's health workforce is needed to achieve high levels of UHC effective coverage. The largest shortages are in low-income settings, highlighting the need for increased financing and coordination to train, employ, and retain human resources in the health sector. Actual HRH shortages might be larger than estimated because minimum thresholds for each cadre of health workers are benchmarked on health systems that most efficiently translate human resources into UHC attainment.

}, year = {2022}, journal = {The Lancet}, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, issn = {0140-6736}, url = {https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2822%2900532-3}, doi = {10.1016/s0140-6736(22)00532-3}, language = {eng}, }