卫生信息系统人力资源从千年发展目标过渡到可持续发展目标和大流行后时代:审查2000年至2022年的证据。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2023-12-01 DOI:10.1186/s12960-023-00880-y
Pamela A McQuide, Andrew N Brown, Khassoum Diallo, Amani Siyam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:本综述对中低收入国家在加强卫生信息系统人力资源(HRHIS)方面的经验进行了政策追踪趋势分析。本文借鉴了近二十年来的证据,并应用了修改后的巴达赫政策分析框架。鉴于《全球卫生人力资源战略:2030年人力资源》实施已过半,以及COVID-19大流行和其他全球突发卫生事件旷日持久,再加上对卫生和护理工作者提供基本卫生服务的需求日益增加,现在比以往任何时候都更需要及时审查卫生人力资源和基础数据系统的证据。考虑到世界卫生大会决议和2000年至2022年期间与卫生与健康相关的全球发展,我们针对同行评议和灰色文献进行了研究,这些文献涵盖了卫生与健康服务的启动、影响、瓶颈和差距。我们还考虑了比尔和梅林达·盖茨基金会资助的一个项目的结果,该项目评估了21个国家的人力资源数据系统以及人力资源数据和信息在政策、规划和管理中的使用情况。根据国家卫生人力账户(NHWA),我们确定了与卫生人力资源管理和治理/领导的数字优先事项相关的优先主题,并介绍了五个国家的案例研究,这些国家通过不同的途径成功发展了卫生人力资源管理。在过去的二十年中,通过大规模实施HRHIS,结合分析和使用数据、维持系统功能以及随着时间的推移进行系统改进所需的技能,已经取得了相当大的进展。全球卫生发展援助投资和技术创新推动了在艾滋病毒/艾滋病、埃博拉病毒和COVID-19危机期间在卫生信息系统、地区卫生信息软件(DHIS2)和伙伴合作方面取得进展。尽管逐步实施NHWA继续通过标准化指标和定期报告引导国家层面的努力,但传统挑战仍然存在,例如数据系统碎片化、系统之间缺乏互操作性以及报告数据利用不足。令人鼓舞的是,一些国家表现出强大的治理和领导能力,另一些国家则表现出强大的卫生保健数字能力。在紧急情况和大流行期间以及在提供常规基本卫生服务期间,需要卫生保健和卫生服务数据为按需决策提供信息。来自不同国家的以证据为基础的例子表明,可靠的卫生和保健人力资源规划和管理是可以实现的。
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The transition of human resources for health information systems from the MDGs into the SDGs and the post-pandemic era: reviewing the evidence from 2000 to 2022.

Background: This review paper offers a policy-tracing trend analysis of national experiences among low- and middle-income countries in strengthening human resources for health information systems (HRHIS). This paper draws on evidence from the last two decades and applies a modified Bardach's policy analysis framework. A timely review of the evidence on HRHIS and underlying data systems is needed now more than ever, given the halfway mark of the Global Strategy on Human Resources for Health: Workforce 2030 and the protracted COVID-19 pandemic and other global health emergencies, over and above the increasing need for health and care workers to provide essential health services.

Main text: Considering World Health Assembly resolutions and HRH-related global developments between 2000 and 2022, we targeted peer-reviewed and gray literature covering the inception, impact, bottlenecks, and gaps of HRHIS. We also considered results from a Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation-funded project that assessed HRH data systems in 21 countries and the use of HRH data and information for policy, planning, and management. Aligned with the National Health Workforce Accounts (NHWA), we identify priority themes related to digital priorities for HRHIS and governance/leadership and present case studies of five countries that pursued different pathways to successfully develop their HRHIS. Over the last two decades, considerable progress has been achieved through a scaled-up implementation of HRHIS combined with the skills needed to analyze and use data, sustain systems functionality, and make systematic improvements over time. Global health development aid investments and technical innovations have led to advancements in HRHIS, district health information software (DHIS2), and partner collaborations during the HIV/AIDS, Ebola, and COVID-19 crises. Although the progressive implementation of NHWA continues to steer country-level efforts through standardized indicators and regular reporting, traditional challenges remain, such as data systems fragmentation, lack of interoperability between systems, and underutilization of reported data. Encouragingly, some countries demonstrate strong governance and leadership capacities and others strong HRHIS digital capacities. Both HRH and health service data are needed to inform on-demand decisions during times of emergencies and pandemics as well as during routine essential health services delivery. Evidence-based examples from distinctive countries demonstrate that reliable HRHIS is achievable for better planning and management of the health and care workforce.

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