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Brain Drain and Health Workforce Distortions in Mozambique
Sherr, kenneth; Mussa, antonio; Chilundo, baltazar; Gimbel, sarah; Pfeiffer, james; Hagopian, amy; Gloyd, stephen.
Afiliação
  • Sherr, kenneth; Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america. washington. US
  • Mussa, antonio; Humanresources department ,Mozambique ministry of health, maputo, Mozambique. Maputo. MZ
  • Chilundo, baltazar; Eduardo Mondlane university, maputo, mozambique. Maputo. MZ
  • Gimbel, sarah; Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america. washington. US
  • Pfeiffer, james; Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america. washington. US
  • Hagopian, amy; Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america. washington. US
  • Gloyd, stephen; Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america. washington. US
PLos ONE ; 7(4): 1-7, 2012. Fig., Tab.
Artigo em Inglês | RDSM | ID: biblio-1355076
Biblioteca responsável: MZ1.1
ABSTRACT

Introduction:

Trained human resources are fundamental for well-functioning health systems, and the lack of health workers undermines public sector capacity to meet population health needs. While external brain drain from low and middle-income countries is well described, there is little understanding of the degree of internal brain drain, and how increases in health sector funding through global health initiatives may contribute to the outflow of health workers from the public sector to donor agencies, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), and the private sector.

Methods:

An observational study was conducted to estimate the degree of internal and external brain drain among Mozambican nationals qualifying from domestic and foreign medical schools between 1980-2006. Data were collected 26-months apart in 2008 and 2010, and included current employment status, employer, geographic location of employment, and main work duties.

Results:

Of 723 qualifying physicians between 1980-2006, 95.9% (693) were working full-time, including 71.1% (493) as clinicians, 20.5% (142) as health system managers, and 6.9% (48) as researchers/professors. 25.5% (181) of the sample had left the public sector, of which 62.4% (113) continued working in-country and 37.6% (68) emigrated from Mozambique. Of those cases of internal migration, 66.4% (75) worked for NGOs, 21.2% (24) for donor agencies, and 12.4% (14) in the private sector. Annual incidence of physician migration was estimated to be 3.7%, predominately to work in the growing NGO sector. An estimated 36.3% (41/113) of internal migration cases had previously held senior-level management positions in the public sector.
Assuntos

Texto completo: Disponível Coleções: Bases de dados nacionais / Moçambique Contexto em Saúde: ODS3 - Meta 3.8 Atingir a cobertura universal de saúde / ODS3 - Saúde e Bem-Estar Problema de saúde: Arranjos de Entrega / Coordenação Multissetorial / Meta 3.8 Atingir a cobertura universal de saúde Base de dados: RDSM Assunto principal: Encéfalo / Sistemas de Saúde / Credenciamento / Cérebro Tipo de estudo: Estudo de incidência / Estudo observacional / Estudo prognóstico Limite: Feminino / Humanos / Masculino Idioma: Inglês Revista: PLos ONE Ano de publicação: 2012 Tipo de documento: Artigo Instituição/País de afiliação: Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america/US / Eduardo Mondlane university, maputo, mozambique/MZ / Humanresources department ,Mozambique ministry of health, maputo, Mozambique/MZ

Texto completo: Disponível Coleções: Bases de dados nacionais / Moçambique Contexto em Saúde: ODS3 - Meta 3.8 Atingir a cobertura universal de saúde / ODS3 - Saúde e Bem-Estar Problema de saúde: Arranjos de Entrega / Coordenação Multissetorial / Meta 3.8 Atingir a cobertura universal de saúde Base de dados: RDSM Assunto principal: Encéfalo / Sistemas de Saúde / Credenciamento / Cérebro Tipo de estudo: Estudo de incidência / Estudo observacional / Estudo prognóstico Limite: Feminino / Humanos / Masculino Idioma: Inglês Revista: PLos ONE Ano de publicação: 2012 Tipo de documento: Artigo Instituição/País de afiliação: Department of global health, university of washington, seattle, washington, unitedsttes of america/US / Eduardo Mondlane university, maputo, mozambique/MZ / Humanresources department ,Mozambique ministry of health, maputo, Mozambique/MZ
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