Toolkits

National Health Workforce Accounts Handbook and Implementation Guide

With the objective to accelerate progress towards universal health coverage, and to facilitate adoption of the Global strategy on human resources for health: Workforce 2030, the Sixtyninth World Health Assembly resolution WHA69.19 in 2016 urged all Member States to consolidate “a core set of human resources for health data […] as well as progressive implementation of national health workforce accounts”.

Reporting on standardized indicators on HRH was further encouraged by the Health Assembly in 2017, which called for the enforcement of the recommendations recently published by the High-Level Commission on Health Employment and Economic Growth. In line with the Global strategy on human resources for health, the 10th recommendation of the High-Level Commission, established by the United Nations Secretary-General in 2016, specifically highlights the need for data, information and accountability to “undertake robust research and analysis of health labour markets, using harmonized metrics and methodologies, to strengthen evidence, accountability and action”.

The National Health Workforce Accounts (NHWA) is a system through which countries progressively improve the availability, quality, and use of data on their health workforce, and thus achieving universal health coverage, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and other national and global health objectives. While this Implementation Guide uses the generic wording of the NHWA, an equivalent system may already exist in a country to monitor information on the health workforce, using similar terminology such as human resources for health (HRH) registry or health workforce observatory, that fulfils the same objective.

The NHWA follows a labour market analysis framework in which key indicators have to be monitored to provide a comprehensive overview of the dynamics of the health workforce in the country. This framework encompasses several sectors to produce an inclusive assessment of HRH data, requiring not only information on the density of health workers, but also information on health workforce education, finance, migration, etc.

In addition, a web platform was elaborated for countries to store data, monitor their indicators and report key national statistics on their health workforce to WHO. Access to the web platform and to NHWA supporting documents is available on the WHO Health Workforce Department website.

Source
World Health Organization (WHO)
Skip to content