The Health Workforce in Latin America and the Caribbean An Analysis of Colombia, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Panama, Peru, and Uruguay
, by Carpio, Carmen; Santiago Bench, Natalia- ISBN: 9781464805943 | 1464805946
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 6/24/2015
The health workforce is the foundation of care and affects quality and outcomes; human resources for health
(HRH) constitutes the largest portion of the health care budget of most countries. Latin America and the
Caribbean has been challenged by imbalances in workforce composition, distribution, and skill mix, as well
as by variations in productivity and quality.
The Health Workforce in Latin America and the Caribbean: An Analysis of Colombia, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Panama,
Peru, and Uruguay provides an update on HRH in these six countries. The discussion is structured around five
key areas of the workforce: financing, organization, management, regulation, and performance.
•• Financing: The authors present the variety of contracting mechanisms, salary levels, and financial
incentives, and their roles in attracting and retaining health workers.
•• Organization: The countries have made progress toward achieving HRH targets and making education
more accessible. However, the absorption capacity remains limited for graduates, the primary health care
focus of training programs needs to be strengthened, and the strategies to encourage rural service have
not effectively addressed the distribution gap of health workers.
•• Management: All six countries have adopted the World Health Organization’s Global Code of Practice on
the International Recruitment of Health Personnel to recognize foreign-trained professionals to help
address shortages and fill gaps in rural and remote areas. However, the countries continue to struggle
with implementing self-sufficiency policies to build the capacity to meet needs. Such policies include
promotion plans, nonmonetary incentives, and personnel for recruitment and eventual placement.
•• Regulation: The countries are working to reduce precarious and unprotected employment, introduce
safety policies to decrease occupational diseases and workplace accidents, and enact legislation to
resolve disputes.
•• Performance: Mixed results have been achieved in health outcomes, access and availability, quality of
care and patient satisfaction, professional practice, and productivity and efficiency.