Health workforce deployment, attrition and density in East Wollega Zone, Western Ethiopia

  • Michael Y
  • Jira C
  • Girma B
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
48Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

BACKGROUND In East Wollega Zone, despite the success in creating considerable number of health facilities, short-age of health personnel, geographical imbalance and increasing attrition is found to be a persistent barrier to the effectiveness of the health system. However, available data is not rich enough to provide reliable information as to what extent these problems exist in the Zone. Hence, this study was conducted to assess health workforce density, deployment and attrition in East Wollega Zone. METHODS A six years retrospective record review from 2000-2005 was conducted between February 1, and March 30, 2006 in eleven randomly selected districts of East Wollega Zone. Data obtained from records and interviews made with selected resource persons were organized by triangulating quantitatively and qualitatively. Quantitative data was analyzed using SPSS 12.01 for windows and thematic frame work analysis was used for qualitative data. RESULTS Health workforce deployment rate for the years 2000-2005 ranged from 8.2% to 15.4 %. In contrast, attrition rate for the same period ranged from 2.9 % to 8.5 %. Attrition rate for the time after decentralization (2003-2005) was nearly two times greater than before decentralization (OR, 2.04, CI, 1.51, 2.85, P=0.00). Moreover, attrition rate was nearly three times greater for a high level professional when compared to the lower level (OR, 3.15, CI , 2.63, 4.37, P=0.00). Attrition rate for males was two times higher as compared to females (OR, 2.07, CI, 1.67, 3.74, P=0.00). About (26.3%) of all health workers and (36.7%) of nurses and midwives were deployed to the capital town of the zone. Factors identified as most likely cause for the lower deployment and higher attritions were budget related constraints, lack of continuing education opportunity and poor career development. CONCLUSIONS The number of health personnel in East Wollega was low both by international standards and relative to the national density. Moreover, attrition was higher for the time after decentralization process. Hence, measures that seek to increase the size of the health workforce through increased recruitment, higher retention of existing staff and better geographical balance have to be urgently explored.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Michael, Y., Jira, C., Girma, B., & Tushune, K. (2011). Health workforce deployment, attrition and density in East Wollega Zone, Western Ethiopia. Ethiopian Journal of Health Sciences, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.4314/ejhs.v20i1.69426

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free