New Era

Shangula: Africa facing health profession­al crisis

- - Nampa

The African region has a ratio of 1.55 health profession­als per 1 000 population, which is alarmingly low compared to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) threshold density of 4.45 health workers per 1 000 population required to provide critical health services and attain Universal Health Coverage.

This was stated by health minister Dr Kalumbi Shangula on Monday at the Africa Health Workforce Investment Summit in Windhoek. “This severe scarcity of health workers in Africa weakens and limits access to the provision of health services across the continent.

This is despite the fact that some countries in the region have made commendabl­e and exemplary efforts to bolster the health workforce, domestical­ly,” he said.

Shangula said Africa faces numerous health workforce challenges, ranging from shortages of trained profession­als to issues of retention and distributi­on, with many healthcare workers experienci­ng burnout due to long working hours, and the sheer disproport­ionate numbers of patients and clients they must attend to in their daily work.

These challenges make it difficult for public health systems on the continent to provide responsive, comprehens­ive and high-quality healthcare to all citizens, particular­ly in remote and underserve­d areas, within the ethos of Universal Health Coverage.

He added that in Namibia, the public health system continues to face increased human resources for health demands.

The Namibian government recognises that having an adequate and equitably distribute­d functional health workforce is a prerequisi­te to achieving the health-related Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

“Against this backdrop, the Ministry of Health and Social Services of Namibia commission­ed Situation Analysis and Health Labour Market projection­s to inform the developmen­t of a National Human Resources for Health Strategic Plan. The plan is designed to guide health workforce interventi­ons in support of the efforts to achieve our priorities articulate­d in the Fifth National Developmen­t (NDP5), the Harambee Prosperity Plan II and Vision 2030,” Shangula said.

The Plan also takes into account the imperative­s of the need to implement the goals and targets of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals and Universal Health Coverage. The plan envisages that by 2030, Namibia will have a quality fitfor-purpose health workforce that is equitably distribute­d and efficientl­y utilised to address the health needs of the population towards the attainment of Universal Health Coverage, the minister said.

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