City
Epaper

WHO launches tool to assess demand for healthcare workers in Africa

By IANS | Updated: October 8, 2024 01:10 IST

Nairobi, Oct 8 The World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday launched the Health Labor Market Analysis (HLMA) support ...

Open in App

Nairobi, Oct 8 The World Health Organization (WHO) on Monday launched the Health Labor Market Analysis (HLMA) support tool to assist Africa in assessing health workforce education capacity, supply, and demand.

The tool in Beta Version 3.0 is designed to facilitate the integration of health workforce planning into labour market analysis, Xinhua news agency reported.

WHO Representative in Kenya Abdourahmane Diallo said that the HLMA support tool allows users to identify investment requirements for health worker employment across the continent.

"The tool offers a novel workforce planning approach to estimate the needed health workers to address the disease burden of a country," Diallo said in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, while opening a workshop for experts from 14 African countries on conducting an epidemiology-based health workforce assessments and projections.

The launch comes at a time when WHO member states are increasingly adopting this epidemiological approach to inform health workforce policies, strategies, and investment plans.

Diallo noted that projections suggest a potential shortfall of 6.1 million health workers in Africa by 2030, emphasizing that this shortage needs to be addressed to effectively combat the region's disease burden through comprehensive health promotion, disease prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, and palliation.

He also pointed out that around 27 per cent of trained health workers remain unemployed, reflecting a significant mismatch between training outcomes and job creation. "This gap requires a 43 per cent increase in current funding levels dedicated to health workforce employment," he said.

Following the launch, the WHO plans to train about 50 international experts in the technical and practical aspects of conducting epidemiology-based health workforce assessments and projections. These experts will form a regional pool that supports the growing number of member states requesting technical assistance.

The experts will apply the tool to assist member states with health labour market analysis and will drive the generation of evidence necessary to inform health workforce investment plans and agreements.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International3 dead in Morocco as protests intensify

InternationalEAM Jaishankar, Aviation Minister Kinjarapu join Airbus-IndiGo reception in Delhi

InternationalPakistan: Nine killed, four injured in Peshawar bomb blast

Other SportsMirabai Chanu claims silver medal in 48kg division at World Weightlifting Championships 2025

InternationalUN approves travel ban exemptions for Afghan FM to visit India from October 9-16

International Realted Stories

International"Will do everything to guarantee the security you deserve": Keir Starmer on Manchester Synagogue terror attack

InternationalNetanyahu hails naval forces for intercepting Gaza-bound aid flotilla

InternationalRRAG highlights racial violence against indigenous people in Bangladesh before UNHRC

InternationalIndia condemns terror attack on Manchester synagogue during Yom Kippur services

InternationalClosing ceremony of MONDIACULT 2025 concludes in Barcelona