Rapid Expansion of the Health Workforce in Response to the HIV Epidemic

The authors describe the global shortage of health care workers and the inadequate personnel available to care for patients with HIV infection. They review evidence showing the benefits of delegating tasks to less specialized workers (task shifting) and promote the expanded use of such services in c...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 2007-12, Vol.357 (24), p.2510-2514
Hauptverfasser: Samb, Badara, Celletti, Francesca, Holloway, Joan, Van Damme, Wim, De Cock, Kevin M, Dybul, Mark
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container_end_page 2514
container_issue 24
container_start_page 2510
container_title The New England journal of medicine
container_volume 357
creator Samb, Badara
Celletti, Francesca
Holloway, Joan
Van Damme, Wim
De Cock, Kevin M
Dybul, Mark
description The authors describe the global shortage of health care workers and the inadequate personnel available to care for patients with HIV infection. They review evidence showing the benefits of delegating tasks to less specialized workers (task shifting) and promote the expanded use of such services in countries with inadequate supplies of doctors and nurses. The authors describe the global shortage of health care workers and the inadequate personnel available to care for patients with HIV infection. They review evidence showing the benefits of delegating tasks to less specialized workers. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that there is now a global deficit of more than 4 million trained health workers. The shortages in health workers are critical in 57 countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. The situation is further exacerbated by the direct effect of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) on health workers in resource-constrained countries in which the disease is epidemic. Poor working conditions and low pay conspire with the risks of occupational transmission and the stress of working in communities devastated by the HIV epidemic to drive up rates of attrition. Many health workers . . .
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subjects Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
AIDS
Community health care
Cost control
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Delivery of Health Care - manpower
Delivery of Health Care - organization & administration
Demographics
Disease Outbreaks
Drug therapy
Health Manpower - trends
HIV
HIV Infections - epidemiology
HIV Infections - therapy
Human immunodeficiency virus
Humans
Nurse practitioners
Nurses
Nurses - supply & distribution
Physicians
Physicians - supply & distribution
Quality of Health Care
Workforce
title Rapid Expansion of the Health Workforce in Response to the HIV Epidemic
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