Abstract

BackgroundA regional health authority in Toronto, Canada, identified health workforce planning as an essential input to the implementation of their comprehensive Primary Care Strategy. The goal of this project was to develop an evidence-informed toolkit for integrated, multi-professional, needs-based primary care workforce planning for the region. This article presents the qualitative workforce planning processes included in the toolkit.MethodsTo inform the workforce planning process, we undertook a targeted review of the health workforce planning literature and an assessment of existing planning models. We assessed models based on their alignment with the core needs and key challenges of the health authority: multi-professional, population needs-based, accommodating short-term planning horizons and multiple planning scales, and addressing key challenges including population mobility and changing provider practice patterns. We also assessed the strength of evidence surrounding the models’ performance and acceptability.ResultsWe developed a fit-for-purpose health workforce planning toolkit, integrating elements from existing models and embedding key features that address the region’s specific planning needs and objectives. The toolkit outlines qualitative workforce planning processes, including scenario generation tools that provide opportunities for patient and provider engagement. Tools include STEEPLED Analysis, SWOT Analysis, an adaptation of Porter’s Five Forces Framework, and Causal Loop Diagrams. These planning processes enable the selection of policy interventions that are robust to uncertainty and that are appropriate and acceptable at the regional level.ConclusionsThe qualitative inputs that inform health workforce planning processes are often overlooked, but they represent an essential part of an evidence-informed toolkit to support integrated, multi-professional, needs-based primary care workforce planning.

Highlights

  • A regional health authority in Toronto, Canada, identified health workforce planning as an essential input to the implementation of their comprehensive Primary Care Strategy

  • Based on the comparative analysis of the information captured in this literature extraction tool, we identified a short-list of models that were used to inform specific components of a fit-for-purpose health workforce planning (HWP) toolkit for primary care within the City of Toronto

  • Based on the findings of our model assessment, we developed a hybrid HWP toolkit for primary care services

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Summary

Introduction

A regional health authority in Toronto, Canada, identified health workforce planning as an essential input to the implementation of their comprehensive Primary Care Strategy. The goal of this project was to develop an evidence-informed toolkit for integrated, multi-professional, needs-based primary care workforce planning for the region. Mixed methods approaches: (1) address data and methodological limitations associated with the independent use of either quantitative of qualitative methods; (2) account for the uncertainty that is inherent in health systems; (3) promote engagement with local stakeholders; and (4) foster a planning culture where policy levers are more readily deployed [2]. In order to account for uncertainty, planners should supplement data modelling and traditional quantitative forecasting with workforce intelligence and qualitative analyses in order to anticipate, and plan for, a system’s potential evolution over time [3, 4]

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