When staff is underpaid: dealing with individual coping strategies of health personnel
Keywords
EthicsIncentives
Career mobility
Motivation
Salaries and fringe benefits
Migration
Health personnel
Job satisfaction
Income
Informal economic activities
Socioeconomic factors
Public sector
Psychological aspects
Coping strategies
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http://dspace.itg.be/bitstream/10390/1481/1/2002bwho0581.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10390/1481
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12163923
Abstract
Health sector workers respond to inadequate salaries and working conditions by developing various individual "coping strategies"--some, but not all, of which are of a predatory nature. The paper reviews what is known about these practices and their potential consequences (competition for time, brain drain and conflicts of interest). By and large, governments have rarely been proactive in dealing with such problems, mainly because of their reluctance to address the issue openly. The effectiveness of many of these piecemeal reactions, particularly attempts to prohibit personnel from developing individual coping strategies, has been disappointing. The paper argues that a more proactive approach is required. Governments will need to recognize the dimension of the phenomenon and systematically assess the consequences of policy initiatives on the situation and behaviour of the individuals that make up their workforce.Date
2002Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:dspace.itg.be:10390/1481urn:issn:0042-9686
HEALTH
http://dspace.itg.be/bitstream/10390/1481/1/2002bwho0581.pdf
JIF
ITG-H3B
ITG-H1A
FTA
U-PUBLIC
http://hdl.handle.net/10390/1481
ABSTRACT
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12163923