29 November 2017
The world faces a critical shortage of skilled health workers and it is time to find common solutions to global challenges. THET believes that the NHS can lead on this and that the NHS and its founding principles can serve as a highly-valued model for ensuring the poor don’t get left behind.
The NHS is a global leader in workforce education and training, recognised both in terms of the quality of the educational opportunities but also the low cost, in comparison to other developed countries and so can lead the way on this development of the global workforce.
THET believes that the UK can move from competition to collaboration in the recruitment, education and retention of health workers, in ways that bring mutual benefit to the health systems of all countries and address the shared 18 million recruitment challenge.
That’s why THET supports the spirit of the ‘Declaration on Human Resources for Health: Building the Health Workforce of the Future’ made at the Fourth Global Forum on Human Resources for Health in Dublin and we stand ready:
It is also a good moment to reflect on the commitments we made at the previous Global Forum held in Recife back in 2013.
Our commitments in Recife were:
And we are pleased to report that good progress has been made against these commitments and reflective evidence can be found in the evaluation of the Health Partnership Scheme, in independent project completion reviews and policy reports such as In our mutual interest.
0 Comments
Leave a comment
Your email address will not be published.