Title: Guidelines
1Task Shifting and New Cadres
- Vision
- The Context
- WHO's Position
- Evidence
- Recommendations
- Future Directions
2Our vision
- "We need to ensure access to a motivated, skilled
and supported health worker by every person, in
every village, everywhere."
Dr LEE Jong-wook WHO Director-General 2003-2006
3Our vision. Let's get it right
- Right people
- Right places
- Right competencies and skill mix
- Right resources and support
4The context
5Better health outcomes occur when a higher
density of health workers are engaged in care.
Source WHO (2006). The World Health Report 2006
Working Together for Health. Geneva, World
Health Organization
6The reality critical shortages and poor
distribution of health workers.
57 countries with fewer than 2.5 doctors, nurses
and midwives per 1000 population
Source WHO (2006). The World Health Report 2006
Working Together for Health. Geneva, World
Health Organization
7Maldistribution within countries creates pockets
of shortages even where there is no crisis.
Urban vs. Rural Distribution of Health Workers
Doctors
Nurses
Others
WHR, 2006
8Imbalances in competencies or "skill mix"
Number of doctors and nurses in selected countries
WHR, 2006
9Current and predicted shortages of some cadres in
many countries
- For Example
- Nurses in the USA
- Doctors in Canada
- Nursing and Care Workers in Norway
10Appearance of "mid-level" or "substitute" cadres
- For Example
- Physician's Assistants in the USA
- Clinical Officers in Zambia
- Medical Assistants in Ghana
- Assistant Medical Officers in Tanzania
11Need for more investment, resources and support
- For Example
- Few countries in the African Region allocate at
least 15 of the national budget to health (Abuja
target) - Poorly equipped facilities and shortages of
commodities (e.g. drugs, diagnostic tests) - Sporadic supervision of staff, especially in
remote areas - Limited, long-term investment in pre-service
education and continuing professional development
12Partnerships agencies and mechanisms to fight
HIV/AIDS in Tanzania.
http//www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/311/575
8/162/F7, accessed on 20 Feb 200CREDIT J.
COHEN/SCIENCE,
13The challenges to scale up services for HIV, TB,
and malaria
World Malaria report
Global Plan to stop TB
HIV/UA assessment report
- Inadequate financing
- HR crisis
- Affordable commodities
- Stigma, discrimination
- - Accountability
- Partnership alignment
- Inadequate financing
- Laboratory capacity
- HR crisis
- Quality drugs
- Drug efficacy
- Information system
- Inadequate financing
- HRH and Community services
- - ME
14Is there a magic bullet?
15Our position
16A range of strategies is needed
- Strategies to improve, for example
- Retention
- Working conditions
- Education and training
- Recruitment
- Remuneration and incentives
- Regulation
- Investment
- The labour market
- Skill mix (task shifting and new cadres)
17Working life span
ENTRYPreparing the workforce Planning Educatio
n Recruitment
WORKFORCE PERFORMANCE
WORKFORCE Enhancing worker performance Supervis
ion Compensation Systems support Lifelong learning
Availability Competence Responsiveness Productivit
y
EXITManaging attrition Migration Career
choice Health and safety Retirement
Source WHO (2006). The World Health Report 2006
Working Together for Health. Geneva, World
Health Organization
18Critical success factors at national level for
scaling up education and training
- Political commitment and good governance
- Sustained government commitment and support
- Collaboration around a country-led health plan
- Significant financial investment
- Health workforce planning
- Commitment to short and long-term health
workforce planning - Commitment to produce appropriately-trained
workers to meet health needs - Significant expansion of pre-service education
programmes - Enabling environment
- Good information systems for health workforce and
education, with monitoring and evaluation - Effective management and leadership
- Labour market capacity and policy to absorb and
sustain additional health workers
19Evidence
20Task shifting
- A process whereby specific tasks are moved, where
appropriate, to health workers with shorter
training and fewer qualifications. - The key questions
- Impact on coverage?
- Impact on quality of services?
- Cost-effective?
- Acceptable by service users?
21First contact with health system for people
living with HIV
22How confident and satisfied are you with the
services provided by CHWs?
Not satisfied
Fairly satisfied
3
3
28
67
Very satisfied
Extremely satisfied
WHO commissioned study on Task Shifting, Central
Plateau, Haiti
23Task shifting and HIV counselling and testing
coverage in Ethiopia
1 600 000
Number of people tested for HIV
1,500,000
CHWs performing HIV TC
1 ,000,000
500 000
500,000
436 854
2006
2007
2005
MOH Ethiopia, 2007
24Ceará's programme of community health agents,
Brazil
1987
1992
1994
- 7,300 CHAs and 235 half-time nurse supervisors
- Served 65 of Ceará's population
- 32 drop in infant mortality
- a substantial increase in exclusive breastfeeding.
National government adopted the Cearà programme
and integrated it into the newly created Family
Health Programme.
- Disaster event gt the government led the
development of a job-creation programme - CHAs trained for 3 months
- Providing monthly visits to 50-250 households
Source Macinko et al, 2006
25Selected child health indicators in Brazil
4 year
3 year
2 year
1 year
Baseline
1 year
3 year
Baseline
2 year
Cesar et al, Social Science and Medicine, 2000
26Neonatal mortality rate in India
Bang et al., Journal of Perinatology, 2005
27TB treatment in hospitals and communities
WHO, 2003
28Cost-effectiveness of task shifting in TB care
WHO, 2003
29Recommendations
30Documents leading up to the task shifting
recommendations and guidelines for HIV/AIDS
- 3X5 Report March 06
- Universal Access Assessment Report March 06
- Treat Train and Retain Plan May 2006
- PEPFAR and UNAIDS (on task shifting)
31Development of the Task Shifting Global
Recommendations and Guidelines for HIV/AIDS
- July 07- Dec 07
- Consultative process
- Identification of the needs/scope
- Development of partnerships and technical
collaboration - Review of published and grey literature
- Gathering of expert opinion
- Identification of evidence gaps
- Additional research in countries
- Drafting and review of guidelines and
recommendations
32The consultative events
- Geneva, Feb 07 - Kigali, June 07 - Geneva, Sep
07 - Kampala, 1-2 Oct 07 - Geneva, 4-5 Oct 07 -
Ethiopia, 8 Oct 07 - Washington, 10 Oct 07 -
Washington, 11-12 Oct 07 - Geneva, 3 Dec 07 -
Geneva, 4-6 Dec 07
33The Document www.who.int/healthsystems/task_shift
ing
- Background
- Scope
- Methods
- Recommendations
- Task shifting as public health initiative
- Creating an enabling regulatory environment
- Ensuring quality of care
- Ensuring sustainability
- Organization of clinical care services
- Annexes
- HIV Tasks analysis by cadres
- Definitions
- Implementation
- Evaluation
- Electronic Annexes
- Evidence tables
- Reports of consultations
- WHO commissioned studies
34Future directions
- WHO Regional Office for Africa is organizing a
consultation in June 2008 on the adaptation of
WHO Guidelines on Task Shifting - WHO is eager to exercise its convening role with
the Professional Associations and the Health
Professions Alliance to define changes in health
professions regulation related with delegation
and education of new cadres - Discuss with partners the need for an
international instrument to tackle with these new
trends in delegation and education - To monitor and evaluate existing practices in
delegation and utilization of new cadres
35Recommendations on adopting task shifting as a
public health initiative
- Consider when access to health services is
constrained by health workforce shortages, along
side other initiatives to increase numbers of
skilled workers - Identify appropriate stakeholders who will need
to be involved from the beginning - Define a nationally endorsed framework that can
ensure harmonization and stability of services - Undertake or update a human resource analysis on
the current human resources for health, the need
for services, the gaps in service provision, the
extent to which task shifting is already taking
place, and the existing human resource quality
assurance mechanisms
36Recommendations on creating an enabling
regulatory environment
- Assess and then consider using existing
regulatory approaches where possible, or
undertake revisions as necessary, to enable
cadres of health workers to practise according to
an extended scope and to allow the creation of
new cadres - Consider adopting a fast-track strategy to
produce essential revisions to regulatory
approaches where necessary.
37The regulatory framework
Working conditions
Supervision Accountability continual
education
Financing Sub- national Implementation
Recruitment, career path
Scope of practice
Health Workers
Standards of care
Standardization of In- service training and
certification
Standardization Of Pre-service training
Licensing and Registration
38Recommendations on ensuring quality of care
- Adapt existing, or create new, human resource
quality assurance mechanisms to support task
shifting. - Define roles and associated competency levels
required both for existing cadres that are
extending their scope of practice, and for newly
created cadres. - Adopt a systematic approach to harmonized,
standardized and competency-based training that
is needs-driven and accredited. - Training and continuing education should be tied
to certification, registration and career
progression mechanisms. - Supportive supervision and clinical mentoring
should be provided to all health workers within
the structure and functions of health teams. - Ensure that the performance of all cadres of
health workers can be assessed against clearly
defined roles, competency levels and standards.
39Recommendations on ensuring sustainability
- Consider measures such as financial and/or
non-financial incentives or other methods as a
means for retaining and enhancing the performance
of health workers with new or increased
responsibilities. - Recognize that essential health services cannot
be provided by people working on a voluntary
basis. - Ensure that task shifting plans are appropriately
costs and adequately financed so that the
services are sustainable.
40Recommendations on the organization of clinical
care services
- Consider the different types of task shifting
practice and elect to adopt, adapt or extend
models that are best suited to the specific
country situation. - Ensure that efficient referral systems are in
place to support the decentralization of service
delivery in the context of task shifting. - Non-physician clinicians can safely and
effectively undertake a majority of clinical
tasks. - Nurses and midwives can safely and effectively
undertake a range of clinical services. - Community health workers can safely and
effectively provide specific services, both in a
health facility and in the community. - People living with HIV/AIDS, who are not trained
health workers, can be empowered to take
responsibility for certain aspects of their own
care, and the care of others. - Other cadres, such as pharmacists, laboratory
technicians and administrators could be included
in a task shifting approach.
41Types of task shifting I, II, III, IV
42Costing Task Shifting I, II
43Costing Task Shifting I, II, III
44Cost estimate summary of findings
- Our estimate is that in the 61 countries with the
highest HIV burden, it will cost a minimum of US
7-9 billion over the next 10 years to implement
the Task Shifting approach - - These estimates correspond to an annual per
capita cost of 3-7 in the countries concerned,
representing 10 to 25 of current health
expenditures typically found in low income
countries.
45Workforce shortages are most severe where the
burden of disease is highest.
Source WHO (2006). The World Health Report 2006
Working Together for Health. Geneva, World
Health Organization
46What do we know today about CHWs programmes?
"Evidence strongly suggests that, particularly
in poor countries, CHW programmes are not an easy
investment, but nonetheless a good one, since the
alternative in reality is no care at all for the
poor living in geographically peripheral areas."
World Health Organization, 2007
47Our vision. Access plus.
- Access Competence Resources Support
- Positive Health Outcomes