Abstract

Introduction:COVID-19 conforms to key baseline characteristics of disaster which is defined as “a situation or event that overwhelms local capacity, necessitating a request for national or international level of assistance.” Many countries faced shortages of health workforce, maldistribution, misalignment of needs and skills of healthcare workers.The research goal is to identify the country responses on the shortage of workforce, their best practices and the lessons learned that may help to better handle any similar crisis in the future.Method:The scoping review was conducted in four electronic academic databases, namely, Medline, Web of Science, EBSCO, and TRIP and 24 scientific articles were reviewed. This study is funded by the World Health Organization Centre for Health Development (WKC-HEDRM-K21001).Results:The main strategies implemented were a financial coordination mechanism, relaxing standards/rule, redeployment, recruiting volunteers, fast tracking medical students, and using other resources in the workforce such as: the recruitment of inactive healthcare workers, returnees whose registration has lapsed within the last 1-2 years and integration of internationally educated health professionals. All these strategies demonstrated advantages like establishing mutual support across nations, organizations, motivating healthcare workers, lessening the workload of healthcare workers, and creating a new staff model for the next pandemic. If a pandemic lasts longer, financial support mechanisms are no longer feasible and longer working hours result in burnout. Managing volunteers, including supervision of their safety and allocation to the area in need, required hard effort and high-level coordination, especially when a needs assessment is unavailable. Another problem was the absence of an available list of resources, including volunteers and retired medical personnel.Conclusion:To date, countries have not yet determined clear policies on how to ensure the sustainability and resilience of the workforce during major health shocks. A follow-up study investigating the strategies implemented is needed.

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