An assessment of existing surge capacity of tertiary healthcare system of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistan using workload indicators for staffing need method.

Muhammad Zeeshan Haroon, Inayat Hussain Thaver
Author Information
  1. Muhammad Zeeshan Haroon: Department of Community Medicine, Ayub Medical College, Abbottabad, Pakistan. zeeshanharoon@yahoo.com. ORCID
  2. Inayat Hussain Thaver: Department of Community Health Sciences, Bahria University Medical & Dental College, Karachi, Pakistan.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Globally the occurrence of disasters has increased more than fourfold during the last three decades. The main concern for the healthcare system responding to a disaster is its ability to deal with the sudden influx of patients and maintaining a certain level of surge capacity. Health workers are considered to be the major driving force behind any health system. Their role gets even more prominent during disasters or public health emergencies. With the lack of information on the health workforce in the tertiary healthcare system of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where most of the disaster surge is diverted, it is difficult to plan and respond to accommodate the sudden surge of patients.
METHODS: This was a mixed method cross-sectional survey conducted in all the tertiary care hospitals of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan to assess the current staffing situation and surge capacity based on the current workload. Annual service statistics of 2018 were collected from all the tertiary care hospitals of the province. WISN was piloted with only one healthcare staff category, i.e., for doctors in Ayub Teaching Hospital before assessment in all the tertiary care hospitals was undertaken.
RESULTS: Overall, there were 1215 surplus doctors in medical and allied specialties and 861 doctors in surgical and allied specialties in the tertiary healthcare system. The health care system has an acute shortage of 565 emergency department doctors. The tertiary healthcare system of KP has an overall shortage of 1099 nurses. Based on the WISN generated numbers for doctors, the tertiary care system of KP has a combined healthcare staff (doctors and nurses) that can manage an additional surge of 6.3% of patients with the current patient workload.
CONCLUSION: The tertiary health care system of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province of Pakistan does not possess the required ≥ 20% HR surge capacity indicating that the tertiary healthcare system is poorly prepared for disasters or public health emergencies. The lack of nursing staff, more than the doctors, is the major reason behind the lack of HR surge capacity of the tertiary health care system.

Keywords

References

East Mediterr Health J. 2019 Oct 07;25(8):553-561 [PMID: 31612969]
Virtual Mentor. 2010 Jun 01;12(6):460-5 [PMID: 23158447]
Res Brief. 2008 Jun;(5):1-8 [PMID: 18630400]
Health Policy Plan. 2012 Jan;27(1):11-8 [PMID: 21296847]
BMJ Open. 2017 May 4;7(4):e013816 [PMID: 28473509]
Prehosp Disaster Med. 2008 Mar-Apr;23(2):113-9 [PMID: 18557290]
East Mediterr Health J. 2018 Dec 09;24(9):823-829 [PMID: 30570114]
Hum Resour Health. 2015 Aug 31;13:89 [PMID: 26621251]
Spinal Cord. 2011 Jul;49(7):851-4 [PMID: 21321576]
Australas Emerg Nurs J. 2016 Nov;19(4):203-209 [PMID: 27545578]
Int Emerg Nurs. 2019 Sep;46:100780 [PMID: 31331837]
Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2009 Jun;3(2 Suppl):S59-67 [PMID: 19349869]
BMJ Open. 2019 Oct 17;9(10):e030547 [PMID: 31628126]
Hum Resour Health. 2017 Jan 26;15(1):9 [PMID: 28125990]
Ann Emerg Med. 2007 May;49(5):602-9 [PMID: 17112633]
Hum Resour Health. 2013 Dec 10;11:64 [PMID: 24325763]
PLoS One. 2016 Mar 09;11(3):e0151170 [PMID: 26959351]

MeSH Term

Cross-Sectional Studies
Humans
Pakistan
Surge Capacity
Tertiary Healthcare
Workforce
Workload

Word Cloud

Similar Articles

Cited By