Motivation and retention of health workers in developing countries: a systematic review
Trinity College Dublin · Irish Life (Ireland) · +1 more institution
Abstract
A key constraint to achieving the MDGs is the absence of a properly trained and motivated workforce. Loss of clinical staff from low and middle-income countries is crippling already fragile health care systems. Health worker retention is critical for health system performance and a key problem is how best to motivate and retain health workers. The authors undertook a systematic review to consolidate existing evidence on the impact of financial and non-financial incentives on motivation and retention.
Four literature databases were searched together with Google Scholar and 'Human Resources for Health' on-line journal. Grey literature studies and informational papers were also captured. The inclusion criteria were: 1) article stated clear reasons for implementing specific motivations to improve health worker motivation and/or reduce medical migration, 2) the intervention recommended can be linked to motivation and 3) the study was conducted in a developing country and 4) the study used primary data.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Incentive
- Health administration
- Nursing research
- Workforce
- Medicine
- Health informatics
- Grey literature
- Nursing