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1.
Creat Nurs ; 28(1): 23-28, 2022 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35173058

ABSTRACT

The attention of the world has been on nurses in the past two years. Because of the pandemic, they have been applauded and their work featured on national news in many countries. However, nurses were not generally seen at press briefings, nor interviewed as experts on any aspect of pandemic control or treatment. Also in 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) published the first State of the World's Nursing Report which highlighted present and future global shortages of nurses and called for nurses to be more visible leaders, present at the highest levels where health policy is made. This call was echoed in the WHO Global Strategic Directions for Nursing and Midwifery published in 2021. This article presents the challenges to nurses being accepted as leaders in the health system, showing the legacy of nursing being a gendered occupation, suggesting a gender-focused analytical framework to address the continuing challenges to women nurses becoming powerful leaders and exploring the need to disrupt the status quo in health systems leadership and nursing to achieve radical and sustainable change.


Subject(s)
Leadership , Pandemics , Female , Health Policy , Humans , World Health Organization
2.
J Nurs Scholarsh ; 53(5): 552-560, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34060220

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To highlight ongoing and emergent roles of nurses and midwives in advancing the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals by 2030 at the intersection of social and economic inequity, the climate crisis, interprofessional partnership building, and the rising status and visibility of the professions worldwide. DESIGN: Discussion paper. METHODS: Literature review. FINDINGS: Realizing the Sustainable Development Goals will require all nurses and midwives to leverage their roles and responsibility as advocates, leaders, clinicians, scholars, and full partners with multidisciplinary actors and sectors across health systems. CONCLUSIONS: Making measurable progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals is critical to human survival, as well as the survival of the planet. Nurses and midwives play an integral part of this agenda at local and global levels. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Nurses and midwives can integrate the targets of the Sustainable Development Goals into their everyday clinical work in various contexts and settings. With increased attention to social justice, environmental health, and partnership building, they can achieve exemplary clinical outcomes directly while contributing to the United Nations 2030 Agenda on a global scale and raising the profile of their professions.


Subject(s)
Midwifery , Nurses , Female , Global Health , Goals , Humans , Pregnancy , Sustainable Development , United Nations
3.
Rev Lat Am Enfermagem ; 28: e3405, 2020 12 09.
Article in English, Portuguese, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33331494
6.
Hum Resour Health ; 17(1): 91, 2019 12 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31791358

ABSTRACT

Recent studies reveal public-sector healthcare providers in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are frequently absent from work, solicit informal payments for service delivery, and engage in disrespectful or abusive treatment of patients. While extrinsic factors may foster and facilitate these negative practices, it is not often feasible to alter the external environment in low-resource settings. In contrast, healthcare professionals with strong intrinsic motivation and a desire to serve the needs of their community are less likely to engage in these negative behaviors and may draw upon internal incentives to deliver a high quality of care. Reforming medical education admission and training practices in LMICs is one promising strategy for increasing the prevalence of medical professionals with strong intrinsic motivation.


Subject(s)
Developing Countries , Education, Medical/methods , Education, Medical/statistics & numerical data , Motivation , School Admission Criteria/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Poverty
7.
Creat Nurs ; 25(1): 6-9, 2019 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30808779

ABSTRACT

Nurses are the largest group in the global health workforce, but due to social, political, and gender inequality, traditionally their role has been undervalued. Nursing Now is a 3-year campaign which aims to empower nurses worldwide by building grassroots support to demand better investment in nursing and midwifery to tackle 21st-century health challenges.


Subject(s)
Nursing , Consumer Advocacy , Humans , Internationality , Power, Psychological
8.
J Clin Nurs ; 27(7-8): 1301-1303, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29430758
10.
World Health Popul ; 13(2): 34-40, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22543442

ABSTRACT

Policy makers in healthcare in all countries are faced with challenges of designing and implementing strategies that will achieve three major and essential goals: produce enough health workers for a cost-effective skills mix to deliver high-quality care; attract trained health workers into the workforce; and deploy health workers where they are most needed and keep them there. Yet these apparently straightforward strategies are seldom wholly successful, and there is little clear evidence to guide the frustrated policy maker. This paper explores the reasons why it may be so difficult to come up with strategies that guarantee success and looks at what we do know about attracting, retaining and motivating health workers to get them and keep them working productively where they are most needed.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Health Workforce/organization & administration , Motivation , Personnel Management/methods , Africa South of the Sahara , Humans , Job Satisfaction , Personnel Selection
12.
Hum Resour Health ; 8: 25, 2010 Nov 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21073733

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The USAID-funded Capacity Project established the Global Alliance for Pre-Service Education (GAPS) to provide an online forum to discuss issues related to teaching and acquiring competence in family planning, with a focus on developing countries' health related training institutions. The success of the Global Alliance for Nursing and Midwifery's ongoing web-based community of practice (CoP) provided a strong example of the successful use of this medium to reach many participants in a range of settings. CASE DESCRIPTION: GAPS functioned as a moderated set of forums that were analyzed by a small group of experts in family planning and pre-service education from three organizations. The cost of the program included the effort provided by the moderators and the time to administer responses and conduct the analysis. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: Family planning is still considered a minor topic in health related training institutions. Rather than focusing solely on family planning competencies, GAPS members suggested a focus on several professional competencies (e.g. communication, leadership, cultural sensitivity, teamwork and problem solving) that would enhance the resulting health care graduate's ability to operate in a complex health environment. Resources to support competency-based education in the academic setting must be sufficient and appropriately distributed. Where clinical competencies are incorporated into pre-service education, responsible faculty and preceptors must be clinically proficient. The interdisciplinary GAPS memberships allowed for a comparison and contrast of competencies, opportunities, promising practices, documents, lessons learned and key teaching strategies. CONCLUSIONS: Online CoPs are a useful interface for connecting developing country experiences. From CoPs, we may uncover challenges and opportunities that are faced in the absorption of key public health competencies required for decreasing maternal mortality and morbidity. Use of the World Health Organization (WHO) Implementing Best Practices Knowledge Gateway, which requires only a low bandwidth connection, gave educators an opportunity to engage in the discussion even in the most Internet access-restricted places (e.g. Ethiopia). In order to sustain an online CoP, funds must come from an international organization (e.g. WHO regional office) or university that can program the costs long-term. Eventually, the long-term effectiveness and sustainability of GAPS rests on its transfer to the members themselves.

14.
Nurs Stand ; 23(1): 24-5, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18814473

ABSTRACT

Information technology is set to transform health services in low resource countries, benefits which could filter down to their wealthier counterparts.


Subject(s)
Developing Countries , Internet , Quality of Health Care , Telephone
16.
Soc Sci Med ; 64(9): 1876-91, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17316943

ABSTRACT

Migration of skilled health workers from sub-Saharan African countries has significantly increased in this century, with most countries becoming sources of migrants. Despite the growing problem of health worker migration for the effective functioning of health care systems there is a remarkable paucity and incompleteness of data. Hence, it is difficult to determine the real extent of migration from, and within, Africa, and thus develop effective forecasting or remedial policies. This global overview and the most comprehensive data indicate that the key destinations remain the USA and the UK, and that major sources are South Africa and Nigeria, but in both contexts there is now greater diversity. Migrants move primarily for economic reasons, and increasingly choose health careers because they offer migration prospects. Migration has been at considerable economic cost, it has depleted workforces, diminished the effectiveness of health care delivery and reduced the morale of the remaining workforce. Countries have sought to implement national policies to manage migration, mitigate its harmful impacts and strengthen African health care systems. Recipient countries have been reluctant to establish effective ethical codes of recruitment practice, or other forms of compensation or technology transfer, hence migration is likely to increase further in the future, diminishing the possibility of achieving the United Nations millennium development goals and exacerbating existing inequalities in access to adequate health care.


Subject(s)
Emigration and Immigration/trends , Health Personnel , Africa South of the Sahara , Developed Countries , Humans
18.
Lancet ; 364(9449): 1984-90, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15567015

ABSTRACT

In this analysis of the global workforce, the Joint Learning Initiative-a consortium of more than 100 health leaders-proposes that mobilisation and strengthening of human resources for health, neglected yet critical, is central to combating health crises in some of the world's poorest countries and for building sustainable health systems in all countries. Nearly all countries are challenged by worker shortage, skill mix imbalance, maldistribution, negative work environment, and weak knowledge base. Especially in the poorest countries, the workforce is under assault by HIV/AIDS, out-migration, and inadequate investment. Effective country strategies should be backed by international reinforcement. Ultimately, the crisis in human resources is a shared problem requiring shared responsibility for cooperative action. Alliances for action are recommended to strengthen the performance of all existing actors while expanding space and energy for fresh actors.


Subject(s)
Health Workforce , Africa , Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Global Health , Health Personnel/education , Health Workforce/organization & administration , Health Workforce/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Personnel Management
20.
Bull World Health Organ ; 82(8): 595-600, 2004 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15375449

ABSTRACT

Of the 175 million people (2.9% of the world's population) living outside their country of birth in 2000, 65 million were economically active. The rise in the number of people migrating is significant for many developing countries because they are losing their better-educated nationals to richer countries. Medical practitioners and nurses represent a small proportion of the highly skilled workers who migrate, but the loss for developing countries of human resources in the health sector may mean that the capacity of the health system to deliver health care equitably is significantly compromised. It is unlikely that migration will stop given the advances in global communications and the development of global labour markets in some fields, which now include nursing. The aim of this paper is to examine some key issues related to the international migration of health workers and to discuss strategic approaches to managing migration.


Subject(s)
Emigration and Immigration/statistics & numerical data , Foreign Medical Graduates/supply & distribution , Foreign Professional Personnel/supply & distribution , Health Workforce/statistics & numerical data , Nurses/supply & distribution , Africa/ethnology , Developed Countries , Developing Countries , Humans , International Cooperation , Public Policy , Salaries and Fringe Benefits , Socioeconomic Factors , United Kingdom , United States
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