Background: Healthcare worker absenteeism is common in resource limited settings and contributes to poor quality of care in maternal and child health service delivery. There is a dearth of qualitative information on the scope, contributing factors, and impact of absenteeism in Kenyan healthcare facilities.
Methods: In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted between July 2015 and June 2016 with 20 healthcare providers in public and private healthcare facilities in Central and Western Kenya. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, coded, and analyzed using an iterative thematic approach.
Results: Half of providers reported that absenteeism occurs in both private and public health facilities. Absenteeism was most commonly characterized by providers arriving late or leaving early during scheduled work hours. The practice was attributed to institutional issues including: infrequent supervision, lack of professional consequences, limited accountability, and low wages. In some cases, healthcare workers were frequently absent because they held multiple positions at different health facilities. Provider absences result in increased patient wait times and may deter patients from seeking healthcare in the future.
Conclusion: There is a significant need for policies and programs to reduce provider absenteeism in Kenya. Intervention approaches must be cognizant of the contributors to absenteeism which occur at the institutional level.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4435-0 | DOI Listing |
J Adv Nurs
December 2024
Nursing Administration and Education Department, Associate professor, College of Nursing, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Aim: Adverse events impact patients as primary victims including their families, while healthcare providers are impacted as second victims. These incidents have serious psychological and physical impacts on healthcare providers' quality of life and their ability to execute their jobs. As no studies have been conducted in the Middle East to explore the experiences of second victims among nurses, this study examined the relationship between nurses' second victim experiences, turnover and absenteeism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Glob Health
January 2025
Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice, World Bank, Washington, DC, USA.
The health sector has faced long-standing challenges in drivers of worker behaviours and performance, such as job satisfaction, which have been worsened by COVID-19. Structural issues including high workloads and poor working conditions have long contributed to dissatisfaction among health workers. The pandemic escalated unsafe working conditions, causing workers' deaths, increasing burnout rates, and contributing to exodus from health-care jobs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Patient Rep Outcomes
December 2024
NIHR King's Clinical Research Facility and Headache Group, King's College, London, UK.
Background: Eptinezumab's impact on self-reported work productivity in adults with migraine and 2‒4 prior preventive migraine treatment failures is not fully understood.
Methodology: Electronic diaries captured monthly migraine days (MMDs) reported by patients enrolled in the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled DELIVER trial (NCT04418765). The migraine-specific Work Productivity and Activity Impairment questionnaire, administered at baseline and each monthly visit, was a secondary outcome of DELIVER and used to model changes from baseline in self-reported monthly hours of absenteeism (decreased work attendance) and presenteeism (reduced work efficiency while at work with a migraine) in Canada, as the base case.
Healthcare (Basel)
December 2024
Faculty of Economics, University of Porto, 4200-464 Porto, Portugal.
Background/objectives: Absenteeism refers to the frequent, often unplanned, absence from the workplace. This study examines the interrelations among job satisfaction, quality of life (QoL), and absenteeism among formal caregivers for elderly individuals. With the significant demographic shift toward an aging population, understanding these dynamics is increasingly important.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNpj Ment Health Res
December 2024
Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Violence, verbal abuse, threats, and sexual harassment of healthcare providers by patients is a major challenge for healthcare organizations around the world, contributing to staff turnover, distress, absenteeism, reduced job satisfaction, and worsening mental and physical health. To enable interventions prior to possible violent episodes, we trained two deep learning models to predict violence against healthcare workers 3 days prior to violent events for case and control patients. The first model is a document classification model using clinical notes, and the second is a baseline regression model using largely structured data.
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