Martina Bj�rkman’s research while affiliated with Stockholm University and other places

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Publications (1)


Local Accountability
  • Article
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January 2006

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145 Reads

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14 Citations

Martina Bj�rkman

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The current shortage of health workers in many low-income countries poses a threat to the quality of health services. When the number of patients per health worker grows sufficiently high, there will be insufficient time to diagnose and treat all patients adequately. This paper tests the hypothesis that a high caseload reduces the level of effort per patient in the diagnostic process, using a new data set from rural Tanzania. Tanzania has a severe shortage of health workers, and previous research has pointed at high workload as a main reason for sub-standard clinical performance. We observed and evaluated the level of effort of 159 clinicians in 2,095 outpatient consultations at 126 health facilities with different levels of caseload per clinician. Surprisingly, we find no association between caseload and the level of effort per patient in the diagnostic process. In fact, clinicians appear to have ample amounts of idle time. We conclude that health workers are not overworked and that scaling up the number of health workers in this setting is unlikely to raise the quality of health services. A more promising measure for improved quality is to raise the level of formal clinical training among the clinicians, although training alone seems far from enough to raise quality to adequate levels.

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Citations (1)


... Intervention: Citizen Report Cards (Bjorkman et al., 2006) Country: Uganda PITA: T, A Summary: This study looks at the impacts of an intervention in which "report cards" of health service provision were disseminated amongst communities (T), and a series of interface meetings between service providers and citizens were organised to review the reports and identify an action plan for improvements (A). Though both of these health-sector interventions work to identify challenges and develop action plans to improve outcomes, the Uganda study enables citizens to hold public health providers accountable for delivering services, and jointly develops strategies for improvement to which the health providers are accountable. ...

Reference:

PROTOCOL: Participation, inclusion, transparency and accountability (PITA) to improve public services in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review
Local Accountability