Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities

The health workforce in Malawi, along with other African countries suffered from an acute shortage of its workforce. The Malawi health sector strategic plan (HSSP) 2011-2016 set out key strategies and interventions to support the delivery of an ess...

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Main Authors: Mziray, Elizabeth, Gorgens, Marelize, McCauley, Pamela
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/294301580714814242/Implementation-of-WISN-Study-in-Seventy-Five-Facilities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33307
id okr-10986-33307
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-333072021-05-25T09:32:29Z Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities Mziray, Elizabeth Gorgens, Marelize McCauley, Pamela HEALTH WORKERS HEALTH WORKFORCE COMMUNITY WORKERS HEALTH CADRES HEALTH VOLUNTEERS The health workforce in Malawi, along with other African countries suffered from an acute shortage of its workforce. The Malawi health sector strategic plan (HSSP) 2011-2016 set out key strategies and interventions to support the delivery of an essential health package of services. The human resources for health strategic plan included an HRH capacity development plan that focused on training of registered nurse midwifes, nurse midwife technicians, community midwives and community volunteers. These plans focused on production of health care workers (increasing the quantity) but not on the most efficacious distribution based on disease burden and demand for services. Emergency approaches to replace health workers were instituted to address the shortages of health workers together with the fielding of large numbers of community volunteers and community based health surveillance assistants which could be trained in a short space of time and provide the community essential health package (c-EHP). The Ministry of Health (MoH) is currently developing its next health sector strategic plan, with an expansion of the essential health package and is now challenged with increasing its stock of health workers within the context of declining share of development assistance. The World Bank as part of its support to the government of Malawi (GoM) has instituted a WISN study in seventy-five Health facilities targeting eight priority health cadres. Additionally, a mapping and qualitative study have been undertaken to identify key community cadres undertaking direct health related activities with their communities. The results of this study will provide evidence to inform policy and strategy development particularly in relation to the current work of the MoH on development of the new five-year HSSP and HR strategy. 2020-02-10T22:05:20Z 2020-02-10T22:05:20Z 2017-06-30 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/294301580714814242/Implementation-of-WISN-Study-in-Seventy-Five-Facilities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33307 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Health Study Africa Malawi
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic HEALTH WORKERS
HEALTH WORKFORCE
COMMUNITY WORKERS
HEALTH CADRES
HEALTH VOLUNTEERS
spellingShingle HEALTH WORKERS
HEALTH WORKFORCE
COMMUNITY WORKERS
HEALTH CADRES
HEALTH VOLUNTEERS
Mziray, Elizabeth
Gorgens, Marelize
McCauley, Pamela
Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities
geographic_facet Africa
Malawi
description The health workforce in Malawi, along with other African countries suffered from an acute shortage of its workforce. The Malawi health sector strategic plan (HSSP) 2011-2016 set out key strategies and interventions to support the delivery of an essential health package of services. The human resources for health strategic plan included an HRH capacity development plan that focused on training of registered nurse midwifes, nurse midwife technicians, community midwives and community volunteers. These plans focused on production of health care workers (increasing the quantity) but not on the most efficacious distribution based on disease burden and demand for services. Emergency approaches to replace health workers were instituted to address the shortages of health workers together with the fielding of large numbers of community volunteers and community based health surveillance assistants which could be trained in a short space of time and provide the community essential health package (c-EHP). The Ministry of Health (MoH) is currently developing its next health sector strategic plan, with an expansion of the essential health package and is now challenged with increasing its stock of health workers within the context of declining share of development assistance. The World Bank as part of its support to the government of Malawi (GoM) has instituted a WISN study in seventy-five Health facilities targeting eight priority health cadres. Additionally, a mapping and qualitative study have been undertaken to identify key community cadres undertaking direct health related activities with their communities. The results of this study will provide evidence to inform policy and strategy development particularly in relation to the current work of the MoH on development of the new five-year HSSP and HR strategy.
format Report
author Mziray, Elizabeth
Gorgens, Marelize
McCauley, Pamela
author_facet Mziray, Elizabeth
Gorgens, Marelize
McCauley, Pamela
author_sort Mziray, Elizabeth
title Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities
title_short Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities
title_full Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities
title_fullStr Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Human Resources for Health in Malawi : Implementation of WISN Study in Seventy-Five Facilities
title_sort analysis of human resources for health in malawi : implementation of wisn study in seventy-five facilities
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/294301580714814242/Implementation-of-WISN-Study-in-Seventy-Five-Facilities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33307
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