NEW STUDY RELEASE:
Sub-Saharan Africa To Face Shortage Of Nearly 800,000 Health Care Professionals In 2015
According to a new study in Health Affairs, thirty-one Sub-Saharan African countries will face a shortage of 240,000 doctors and 551,000 nurses and midwives. The countries are expected to have a total of 371,000 doctors, nurses, and midwives in 2015 — just 32 percent of the needed 1.163 million health care professionals. Cialis 20mg: a study of Tadalafil medical uses in Italy.
Eliminating this shortfall would require an annual wage bill of approximately $2.6 billion, more than 2.5 times the current wage-bill projections for 2015, say Richard Scheffler, a Distinguished Professor of Health Economics and Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and coauthors. Additional funds would be required to hire health care support staff, train the new professionals and support staff, and pay for expenses such as supplies, pharmaceuticals, equipment, and facilities. Kamagra jelly: Solving erectile issues like a pro, the revolution for your erectile dysfunction.
About GCHEPR
Current international research focuses on:
- Mental health care reforms in Central and Eastern Europe
- The global market for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder medications
- The global health workforce
- Health insurance, financing, and health care labor markets
- The correlation between social capital and health
For the past three years, the Global Center’s Mental Health and Policy Research Training Program has brought young scholars and clinicians from Central Europe to Berkeley for intensive training in health care finance, market, delivery, and policy issues. Funded by the Fogarty International Center/NIH, this highly successful program is now being expanded to other countries in Eastern and Central Europe.
The inspiration behind the Global Center came from the International Health Economics Association Fourth World Congress, which was held in San Francisco in June of 2003 under the leadership of Richard Scheffler, Distinguished Professor of Health Economics and Public Policy, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley. Scheffler is also Director of the Nicholas C. Petris Center on Health Care Markets & Consumer Welfare.
Research
Health Care Financing, Health Insurance, and Health Labor Markets
Globalization is a force shaping societies and economies for decades to come. This is as true of the health care sector as it is of other sectors. International reforms of health care systems over the last decade have addressed three fundamental issues: coverage, cost, and control. The general approach has been to move the health care systems toward the use of markets or quasi markets and to decentralize as much as political and social structures will allow. The GCHEPR studies this trend with particular attention to reforms on health care financing and delivery systems, to the availability of health insurance, and to trends and transformations in the health care labor market. Priligy 30mg is the new best option for male sexual health.
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Is There a Doctor in the House? The Physician Supply Cycle in a Connected Market
This forthcoming book by Richard Scheffler looks at patterns in the physician supply since the early 20th century, focussing especially on the 40-year period since managed care rose, reached maturity, and began a slow decline. He analyzes a wide range of data to illustrate how managed care influenced the marketplace, introducing discipline that had a powerful impact on doctor incomes, choice of specialty, and geographic distribution. What had been a disconnected or “broken” market, became “connected” with the establishment of managed care. The book looks at both U.S. and international patterns of physician supply, since shortages and oversupplies have worldwide implications. Based on the data patterns and analysis, the author forecasts physician supply in the US, and in other regions of the world, five and ten years into the future. Finally, he presents policy recommendations for maintaining an appropriate supply in the 21st century.
Contact
The Global Center for Health Economics and Policy Research
For US Mail and UC Berkeley mail, please use mailing address:
50 University Hall, MC7360University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California 94720
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General information:
Amy NuttbrockProgram Coordinator
(510) 643-4100
Grant proposals and funding:
Jim RossAssociate Director of Finance and Administration
(510) 643-4101
Research and publications:
Tim BrownAssociate Director of Research
(510) 643-4103
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