Teaming Up in Tanzania: Supporting the National Response to HIV |
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Voices from the Capacity Project In Tanzania, the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare urgently needs health workers to serve hard-to-reach communities. "They're in desperate need of hiring people in rural districts," says Shari Adler, who has been working with the Capacity Project in Dar es Salaam.
Partnering with the Ministry, "the Benjamin William Mkapa HIV/AIDS Foundation handles the new hire aspect," Adler explains, "while the Capacity Project handles the HRH system strengthening aspect" by helping district leaders develop long-term solutions to recruitment and retention problems.
Retention is a particular challenge for health professionals who work in rural areas, Adler notes. As one of her contributions, she developed a toolkit that will be used "to train HRH leaders on improving working conditions, enhancing employee satisfaction and creating ways to retain employees. The idea is to make these HR processes comprehensible, identify leadership roles and bring these procedures into everyday practice."
At a recent consultative session with Ministry staff, "we got their opinions and received really good feedback on the draft toolkit," Adler reports. "Once the final draft is approved it will be delivered to rural, hard-to-reach districts and could help create better working environments, motivate health workers and improve health services." At first Adler wasn't sure if her work would make an impact. "When I was creating the toolkit, I thought it might not be used," she admits. "But what I did really took shape. I saw that it would be rolled out to people, and I think it will do well." Simagom agrees, and adds that it's important that "all managers or supervisors of the emergency hires have access to the toolkit. That is something the district managers need to help with."
[September 2007. Print a PDF version.] The Capacity Project, funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and implemented by IntraHealth International and partners (IMA, JHPIEGO, LATH, MSH, PATH, TRG), helps developing countries strengthen human resources for health to better respond to the challenges of implementing and sustaining quality health programs. The Voices from the Capacity Project series is made possible by the support of the American people through USAID. The contents are the responsibility of IntraHealth International and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government. |