Abstract

BackgroundWe study healthcare employees’ turnover intentions in the Afar National Regional State of Ethiopia. This rural region is experiencing the globally felt crisis in human resources, which is inhibiting its ability to meet health-related sustainable development goals.MethodsRealist case study which combines literature study and qualitative analysis of interview and focus group discussion data, following a realist case study protocol.ResultsA large majority of employees has turnover intentions. Building on Herzberg’s two-factor theory, person-environment fit theory, as well as recent sub-Saharan evidence, analysis of the collected data yields four turnover mechanisms: (1) lack of social and personal opportunities in the region, (2) dissonance between management logic and professional logic, (3) standards of service operations are hard to accept, and (4) lack of financial improvement opportunities.ConclusionsWhile the first and fourth mechanisms may be out of reach for local (human resource) management interventions, the second and third mechanisms proposed to explain health workforce turnover appear to be amenable to local (human resource) management interventions to strengthen healthcare. These mechanisms are likely to play a role in other remote sub-Saharan regions as well.

Highlights

  • We study healthcare employees’ turnover intentions in the Afar National Regional State of Ethiopia

  • Using the conceptual framework of the context-mechanism-outcome configuration [23], our methods aimed to identify mechanisms that are likely to produce turnover intention among healthcare employees at work in the Afar Region health system

  • Doctors switching from public to private healthcare to increase their income are reported to be frequent in rural areas where it forms a main reason for the shortage of health human resources [26]

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Summary

Introduction

We study healthcare employees’ turnover intentions in the Afar National Regional State of Ethiopia. This rural region is experiencing the globally felt crisis in human resources, which is inhibiting its ability to meet health-related sustainable development goals. While sub-Saharan Africa carries over 24% of the global burden of disease, only 3% of the global health workforce works in this region. The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia is a developing sub-Saharan country, ranked 173 out of 186 on the Human Development Index [6] and 127 out of van de Klundert et al Human Resources for Health (2018) 16:37. The reported tendency among healthcare employees to move from rural to urban areas structurally threatens healthcare availability for the rural population [1]

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