Productivity

Moving Forward with the Health Labor Market Agenda

This presentation guided an interactive roundtable discussion at the CapacityPlus knowledge-sharing and dissemination event, Supporting Country-Led Efforts to Recruit and Retain Health Workers and Improve Their Productivity, held on February 18, 2014, at the National Press Club in Washington, DC.

Managing Dual Job Holding among Health Workers

This presentation guided an interactive roundtable discussion at the CapacityPlus knowledge-sharing and dissemination event, Supporting Country-Led Efforts to Recruit and Retain Health Workers and Improve Their Productivity, held on February 18, 2014, at the National Press Club in Washington, DC.

Increasing Community Health Worker Productivity and Effectiveness: A Review of the Influence of the Work Environment

Community health workers (CHWs) are increasingly recognized as a critical link in improving access to services and achieving the health-related Millennium Development Goals. Given the financial and human resources constraints in developing countries, CHWs are expected to do more without necessarily receiving the needed support to do their jobs well. This article in Human Resources for Health presents policy-makers and program managers with key considerations for a model to improve the work environment as an important approach to increase CHW productivity and, ultimately, the effectiveness of community-based strategies.

Ensuring a Positive Practice Environment: Occupational Safety and Health for Health Worker Productivity

Providing high-quality health care should not be hazardous to the health worker. Health workers are adversely affected by numerous occupational safety and health (OSH) hazards they face on the job. Effective OSH measures contribute to national workforce health and productivity, but only 5%-10% of workers in developing countries have adequate OSH services. This technical brief outlines ways to make health workers’ safety a higher-level policy issue and shows how to create working environments that prioritize occupational health.

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Linking Challenges, Sharing Solutions: The Global Crisis in Human Resources for Health

This journal article suggests that strategies for remedying the global health workforce crisis could also be useful in North Carolina. The article points to specific resources such as the HRH Global Resource Center, the Learning for Performance methodology for in-service training, and the HRH Action Framework and website.
 

Health Worker Retention and Performance Initiatives: Making Better Strategic Choices

Proposes a shared approach to retention and performance improvement based on existing motivation theories and experience in the international health field.

Increasing the Motivation of Health Care Workers

Defines motivation; discusses relationships between motivation, job satisfaction and retention; reviews evidence and considers what works in developing countries.

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