HEALTH WORKFORCE MIGRATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

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HEALTH WORKFORCE MIGRATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA Presentation during 20 th AMCOA Annual Conference Mangochi, Malawi by SOLOMON ORERO AMREF & DANIEL YUMBYA KMP&DB

Presentation Outline Background/Introduction The training of doctors in Africa Why health workers (Doctors) migrate from Sub- Saharan Africa to the wealthier countries Case examples of Migration in Africa Kenya,Ghana, Uganda, South Africa, Mauritius The Impact of the Migration What is being done and what has been done The Global response/who/wha

Background The migration of doctors from LIC to wealthy countries : To further their careers, improve their economic, social or security situation Doctors or health workers have a right of movement The migration has several both positive and negative impacts: A negative imbalance in the health workforce which has for a long time been recognized by WHO Depletes the much needed workforce from the source country Weakens an already weak Health Systems

The investment in the training of Doctors in SSA Medical Education started in Africa as early as 1918 in Dakar Senegal With Independence in the SSA in the 60s and the 70s more schools were established In the 70s to 90s turmoil affected the schools During the last three decades there has been tremendous increment in the establishment of Medical schools in the Public sector, Private for profit and Faith based for non-profit

Samples of Medical schools Sub Saharan Africa Medical Schools as at 2004 1. 47 Countries 87 Medical Schools 2. 11 Countries No Medical Schools 3. 24 Countries 1 Medical School each 4. 12 Countries More than 1 medical school Comparison Physician Population Ratio 1. Sub Saharan Africa 13: 100,000 2. United Kingdom 164:100,000 3. United States of America 279:100,000

Estimated tuition fees for the first year of a Bachelor of Medicine (MBBch) degree in some schools in RSA 2015 Medical Schools Cost in First Year 1. University of Cape Town R64,500 2. Wits University R58,140 3. Stellenbosch University R51,326 4. University of Pretoria R51,270 5. University of KwaZulu-Natal R44,220 6. University of the Free State R41,260

The Investment in Medical Education in SSA

SSA Physician workforce and burden of disease compared to the rest of the world Burden of disease Sub Saharan Africa Sub Saharan Africa suffers Sub Saharan Africa Sub Saharan Africa has Sub Saharan Africa has 12% of world population 27% of the world burden of disease Has 3.5% of world health workforce 1.7% of the World health physicians 1% of Global economic resources

Some examples of Comparative Doctors Salaries a From a few select SSA countries a decade ago COUNTRIES Average monthly wage (US $) Doctors 2004 Doctors 2015 1. Uganda 67 700 2. 3. 4. Liberia Kenya Malawi 228 250 151 1500 (359)#1400 610 4. Ghana 473 1200 5. Zimbabwe 250 400 #Partner support 6. South Africa 2836 7282 7. UK 7676 12122 8. Canada 8472 12918 9. USA 10554 15000

Why Doctors Migrate: Themes Financial (in terms of salary or allowances) Career development (specialization &Promotion) Continuing education & CPD Hospital infrastructure ('work environment') Resource availability (equipment and medical supplies) Hospital management Personal recognition fringe benefits job security personal safety staff shortages and social factors

Estimated location of doctors 5 years after graduation

Case Examples of Migration in SSA In a review in the USA of Physicians: 23% trained outside America of which 64% were from the LIC 5334 were from Africa which is equivalent to 6% of doctors practicing in Africa 86% of the doctors practicing in the USA are from : Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa Of the doctors in the USA from Africa 79% trained in 10 Medical schools!!

Impact of the Migration Lost Investment to the source country Financial remittance which does not benefit health sector Weakened Health Systems Weakened Quality of care Loss of confidence in the institutions that provide health Loss of confidence of institutions that train Specialists and subspecialists trained not available In Zimbabwe between 1991 and 2001 of 1200 physicians trained only 360 remained in the country

What is being done and what has been done Realistic remuneration packages to enhance retention of health workers Incentives: Car loans, housing loans, regular appraisal for promotion using a quota system to recruit students from rural and marginalized areas; shifting from bonding of student doctors for a year or two after their training and serving in remote government hospitals, towards incentive systems,

What is being done and what has been done Human Resource for Health Development Reviewing curriculum for basic training to be responsive and innovative For specialists training innovation in collegian system to accelerate the critical numbers and service delivery HRH systems development Task shifting and sharing examples Strengthening the HSS Strengthening the Quality Assurance Strengthening Regulations

Data on Physicians migration Authentic and accurate data on Physician migration in SSA is challenging Sharing the data from receiving countries is also challenging Migrating physicians do not inform They just resign from the public sector and move on There are also internal migration: From the Public Sector to the private sector From the public sector to the training Institutions Medical Schools From the Public sector to the NGO programmes

The Global Response As early as 1996 the then Deputy President of the RSA raised the red flag on physicians migration from LIC. RSA legislated against immigration of Physicians and emigration of Physicians from OAU countries The Kampala Meeting in 2008 During subsequent WHA meetings the subject was discussed. WHO mandated to develop a protocol to stem the migration crisis/ physician health worker crisis In 2010 the WHA adopted the WHO Code of Practice on the international recruitment of health personnel which had 10 articles

The WHO Code of Practice on the international recruitment of health personnel In 2010 the WHA adopted the WHO code of practice on the international recruitment of personnel as a global framework for dialogue and cooperation on matters concerning health personnel migration and health systems strengthening

The Content ( Articles) of the WHO Code of practice on the international recruitment of the health personnel Objectives Nature and Scope Guiding Principles Responsibilities Rights and recruitment practices Health workforce development and health systems sustainability

The Content of the WHO Code of practice on the international recruitment of the health personnel Data gathering and research Information exchange Implementation of the code Monitoring and Institutional arrangements Partnerships, technical cooperation and financial support

Implementation of the CODE of practice on the international recruitment of Health personnel- A review from 2012 to 2016 Progress to date by countries Gains made Challenges Recommendations

Implementation of the CODE of practice on the international recruitment of Health personnel- A review from 2012 to 2016 Progress to date by countries By 2012, 85 countries out of 193 WHO member countries had: Designated a National Authority on the CODE out of which 13 were from SSA Africa had the lowest responses to the Reported questions on the articles from the National Reporting instruments During the second round of reporting 2015/2016 117 countries reported 8 SSA countries reported

Implementation of the CODE of practice on the international recruitment of Health personnel- A review from 2012 to 2016 Gains Made based on the protocol: Investment in Medical education Investment in HSS Dialogue and structured Migration between countries Efforts at documentation Challenges: Poor documentation Poor reporting Inadequate involvement by all the stakeholders

Recommendations Given the plethora of activities towards the SDGs, the key role of doctors and other health workers: Requires continuous dialogue, education and follow up on its benefits The AMCOA member countries to adopt and domesticate the WHO CODE on Health Workforce migration; AMCOA countries to develop and adopt a Health worker migration protocol. AMCOA members country

ASANTE SANA ZIKOMO KWAMBIRI THANK YOU