2017-2019 年北领地和西澳大利亚州偏远社区土著社区控制卫生服务机构卫生工作者的流动和留用模式。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-08-22 DOI:10.1186/s12960-024-00942-9
Prabhakar Veginadu, Deborah J Russell, Yuejen Zhao, Steven Guthridge, Mark Ramjan, Michael P Jones, Supriya Mathew, Michelle S Fitts, Lorna Murakami-Gold, Narelle Campbell, Annie Tangey, John Boffa, Bronwyn Rossingh, Rosalie Schultz, John Humphreys, John Wakerman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:澳大利亚原住民社区控制医疗服务(ACCHSs)旨在优化原住民获得全面、文化安全的初级医疗保健(PHC)的机会。提供优质服务的核心是留住员工。然而,目前尚缺乏针对澳大利亚原住民初级保健服务机构的员工流动和留任模式的公开研究报告。本研究量化了北领地(NT)和西澳大利亚(WA)地区和偏远地区ACCHS的人员流动和留任情况,并考察了人员流动和留任指标与ACCHS的地理和人口特征之间的相关性:研究使用了11家ACCHS管理的22家地区和偏远地区初级保健诊所医务人员的2017-2019年薪资数据。主要结果衡量指标包括年度流动率和12个月的稳定率,在诊所和组织两个层面进行计算:在任何时间点,每个偏远地区诊所都有五名面向客户的工作人员(土著医疗从业人员、专职医疗人员、医生、护士/助产士和 "其他医疗工作者")和两名非面向客户的工作人员(行政人员和物理人员)。工作人员的年平均流动率非常高,诊所一级的流动率为 151%,组织一级的流动率为 81%。在诊所和机构层面,面对客户的员工的平均年流动率分别为 164% 和 75%,而不面对客户的员工的平均年流动率分别为 120% 和 98%。12 个月的平均稳定率较低,诊所一级的稳定率仅为 49%,组织一级的稳定率为 58%。非原住民员工的诊所级年平均离职率为 162%,原住民员工的年平均离职率为 81%。这两项劳动力指标与诊所的相对偏远程度、所服务的固定客户规模以及每个诊所的年平均员工人数呈中度到高度相关(P 值 结论):北领地和西澳大利亚州偏远地区的全科医疗服务机构的医护人员流动率非常高,留任率也很低。总体而言,随着与地区中心的距离增加,诊所一级的人员流动率也随之增加,而土著员工的流动率较低,这表明增加土著员工的就业率有助于稳定人员配置。留住更多的原住民员工可以减轻 ACCHS 的资源负担,还可以提高文化安全和护理的连续性,从而提高服务质量。
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Patterns of health workforce turnover and retention in Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services in remote communities of the Northern Territory and Western Australia, 2017-2019.

Background: Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHSs) in Australia aim to optimise access to comprehensive and culturally safe primary health care (PHC) for Aboriginal populations. Central to quality service provision is the retention of staff. However, there is lack of published research reporting patterns of staff turnover and retention specific to ACCHSs. This study quantified staff turnover and retention in regional and remote ACCHSs in the Northern Territory (NT) and Western Australia (WA), and examined correlations between turnover and retention metrics, and ACCHSs' geographical and demographic characteristics.

Methods: The study used 2017-2019 payroll data for health workers in 22 regional and remote PHC clinics managed by 11 ACCHSs. Primary outcome measures included annual turnover and 12-month stability rates, calculated at both clinic and organisation levels.

Results: There was a median of five client-facing (Aboriginal health practitioners, allied health professionals, doctors, nurses/midwives, and 'other health workers' combined) and two non-client-facing (administrative and physical) staff per remote clinic, at any timepoint. Mean annual turnover rates for staff were very high, with 151% turnover rates at the clinic level and 81% turnover rates at the organisation level. Mean annual turnover rates for client-facing staff were 164% and 75%, compared to 120% and 98% for non-client-facing staff, at clinic and organisational levels, respectively. Mean 12-month stability rates were low, with clinic-level stability rates of only 49% and organisation-level stability rates of 58%. Mean annual clinic-level turnover rates were 162% for non-Aboriginal staff and 81% for Aboriginal staff. Both workforce metrics were moderately to highly correlated with the relative remoteness of clinics, size of regular clients serviced, and average annual headcount of employees in each clinic (p values < 0.01).

Conclusions: Participating ACCHSs in remote NT and WA have very high turnover and low retention of healthcare staff. Overall, clinic-level turnover rates increase as distance from regional centres increases and are lower for Aboriginal staff, suggesting that greater employment of Aboriginal staff could help stabilise staffing. Improved retention could reduce burden on ACCHSs' resources and may also support quality of service delivery due to improved cultural safety and continuity of care.

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