Friday, November 5, 2010

[EQ] How to create an attractive and supportive working environment for health professionals

How to create an attractive and supportive working environment for health professionals
           

Christiane Wiskow, Independent Health Services Specialist, Switzerland

Tit Albreht, Centre for Health System Analyses, Institute of Public Health of the Republic of Slovenia, Slovenia

Carlo de Pietro, Centre for Research on Health and Social Care Management, Bocconi University, Italy

WHO Regional Office for Europe and European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, 2010

Available online at: http://bit.ly/bo7Coq

 

Key messages

Policy issue and context: poor work environments compromise health workforce supply and quality of care

• Health policy-makers face the challenge of matching increasing demand for health care with a sufficient supply of health professionals in times of existing and projected health-workforce shortages.

• The work environment constitutes an important factor in the recruitment and retention of health professionals, and the characteristics of the work environment affect the quality of care both directly and indirectly. Addressing the work environment, therefore, plays a critical role in ensuring both the supply of a health workforce and the enhancement, effectiveness and motivation of that workforce.

• The purpose of providing attractive and supportive work environments is to create incentives for entering – and remaining in – the health professions, and to provide conditions that enable health workers to perform effectively (to achieve high-quality health services).

Policy options

• Given the complexity of the work-environment issues to be addressed, policy responses need to be multidimensional, cross-cutting and inclusive.

For coherent policies, policy action has to be considered at four levels: international/regional level; national level; sectoral level; and local/organizational level. Effective solutions are context-related and therefore priority has to be given to the local and organizational level. The other levels provide the legislative and regulatory framework and provide guidance and support for the development of workplace policies.

• Two examples of what can be done to improve the quality of the work environment in the health professions include policy approaches to promote a healthy balance between family life and work, and the enhancement of the protection of workers’ health.

• In order to encourage health-sector employers to make a commitment to positive work environments, the development of workplace assessment/ recognition programmes could be considered.

 

Contents

Key messages

Executive summary

Policy brief

Policy issue: poor work environments compromise health-workforce supply and quality of care

How can attractive and supportive work environments be described?

What can be done to improve the health-sector work environment?

Implementation considerations

Summary

References

Annexes

ISSN 1997-8073

 

Editor: Govin Permanand

Associate Editors: Josep Figueras, Manfred Huber, John Lavis, David McDaid, Elias Mossialos
Managing Editors: Kate Willows Frantzen, Jonathan North, Caroline White

Guest Editors: Leen Meulenbergs, Willy Palm, Matthias Wismar

 

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