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The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity College Dublin [email protected]

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Page 1: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

The John Kevany Lecture

Human Resources & Inclusive Health

Mac MacLachlan

Professor of Psychology

Associate Director,

Centre for Global Health

Trinity College Dublin

[email protected]

Page 2: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• 1. What is Inclusive Health?

• 2. How are inclusion and HRH linked?

• 3. From an HR point of view is aid divisive or inclusive?

• 4. What about human resources for health in Ireland - from an inclusive global health perspective?

Page 3: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

We specialise in multi-country comparative

interdisciplinary research seeking to strengthen health systems &

ensure equitable access, for all.

http://global-health.tcd.ie

CENTRE FOR GLOBAL HEALTH

Page 4: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Centre for Global Health addressing two basic Issues

• 1. Who provides health care? – Coverage + Performance

• 2. Who receives health care? – Access + Equity

• Both related to inclusion

Page 5: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

1. What is Inclusive Health?

Page 6: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Inclusion is about how as well as whoMacLachlan, Khasnabis & Mannan (2012) Inclusive Health. Tropical Medicine & International Health, 17,139–141

• Health for All (Alma-Ata Declaration, 1978) ….Inclusive Education has been more successful.

• ‘there is nothing more unequal, than the equal treatment of unequal people’.

Page 7: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Inclusive health is about health for all humankind,

• BUT

• it is important to recognise that human differences – disability, ethnicity, gender - influence people’s experience of healthcare.

Page 8: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• We have a plethora of ‘culturally sensitive’, ‘gender appropriate’, ‘disability aware’, ‘child friendly’

• etc., policies and practices, BUT we lack a broader recognition that what marginalises many vulnerable groups is often not the intrinsic features that are used to characterise those groups, but instead their position in, and positioning by, larger society

• Burke and Eichler (2007) BIAS-FREE

Page 9: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

9

Hierarchy

• Placement determines access to all types of resources

• Ignoring hierarchies reinforces them.

Page 10: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Equity is the process of being fair to all people , respectful of differences, and free from discrimination.

• Equality is the outcome reached through equity and reflects the goal of fostering equitable conditions of all people, rather than treating them the same.

Page 11: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Inclusive health recognises that for every group that is marginalised and ⁄ or vulnerable, there may need to be strategies to address their particular needs in such a way to overcome their particular barriers to health.

• Inclusive is a verb!

Page 12: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Inclusive health delivery means

• allowing for a range of health practitioner cadres to be involved in providing an acceptable quality of care in the most efficient and cost-effective manner.

• Alternative cadre, task shifting, supervision, motivation, performance, efficacy

Page 13: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Inclusive health is about …

• Who gets healthcare

• And

• Who provides healthcare

Page 14: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

2. How are inclusion and HRH linked?

The Example of Community Based Rehabilitation

Page 15: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity
Page 16: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity
Page 17: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Disability

Page 18: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Who is disabled?The World Report on Disability 2011

• 1 billion people

• 15% of the population

• 80% living in low-income countries

Page 19: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity
Page 21: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

CBR MATRIX

HEALTH

PROMOTION

PREVENTION

MEDICAL CARE

REHABILITATION

EDUCATION

EARLY CHILDHOOD

PRIMARY

SECONDARY & HIGHER

NON-FORMAL

LIVELIHOOD

SKILLSDEVELOPMENT

SELF-EMPLOYMENT

FINANCIAL SERVICES

WAGE EMPLOYMENT

SOCIAL

RELATIONSHIPSMARRIAGE &

FAMILY

PERSONAL ASSISTANCE

CULTURE&

ARTS

RECREATION LEISURE &

SPORTS

EMPOWERMENT

COMMUNICATION

SOCIAL MOBILIZATION

POLITICAL PARTICIPATION

SELF-HELP GROUPS

ASSISTIVEDEVICES

LIFE-LONG LEARNING

SOCIAL PROTECTION

ACCESS TO JUSTICE

DISABLED PEOPLE'S

ORGANIZATIONS

Page 22: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity
Page 23: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity
Page 24: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

The World Report on Disability (2011)

Page 25: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Alternative cadre?

CBR MATRIX

HEALTH

PROMOTION

PREVENTION

MEDICAL CARE

REHABILITATION

EDUCATION

EARLY CHILDHOOD

PRIMARY

SECONDARY & HIGHER

NON-FORMAL

LIVELIHOOD

SKILLSDEVELOPMEN

T

SELF-EMPLOYMENT

FINANCIAL SERVICES

WAGE EMPLOYMENT

SOCIAL

RELATIONSHIPSMARRIAGE &

FAMILY

PERSONAL ASSISTANCE

CULTURE&

ARTS

RECREATION LEISURE &

SPORTS

EMPOWERMENT

COMMUNICATION

SOCIAL MOBILIZATION

POLITICAL PARTICIPATIO

N

SELF-HELP GROUPS

ASSISTIVEDEVICES

LIFE-LONG LEARNING

SOCIAL PROTECTION

ACCESS TO JUSTICE

DISABLED PEOPLE'S

ORGANIZATIONS

Page 26: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Staff skills not staff types for community-based rehabilitationMacLachlan, Mannan & McAuliffe (2011) Lancet, 377, 1998-99

Page 27: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Job Design

• What needs to be done

• Job Analysis

• Job Specification

• Training – All should be done as scientifically as possible

Page 28: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Switching from ‘them’ to ‘us’

• Are ‘we’ being divisive?

Page 29: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

3. From an HR point of view is aid divisive or inclusive?

• The dual salary system - a taboo

Page 30: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• In aid there are often huge pay discrepancies–Which replicate the very

inequities they are meant to eliminate!

Page 31: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• How would anyone feel if a work ‘partner’ was earning 20X more, or less, than oneself?

Page 32: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Double Demotivation From: Psychology of Aid,

Carr, Mc Auliffe & MacLachlan (1998). London: Routledge

Page 33: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Field survey from Malaŵi• ____________________________________________________________________•

ExpatriatesMalaŵians

• ____________________________________________________________________• Items about foreign expatriates

• Some expatriates on large salaries feel guilty • because they earn much more than local workers 3.4 2.0

• Expatriates are better employees than their 2.7 1.6• local counterparts • -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------• Items about local instructors

• Expatriates who work abroad should work under • the same terms and conditions as local people 2.2 4.1

• Most companies are unfair to their local employees 3.3 4.6

• Local people are de-motivated by the large salaries 2.9 4.2• that some expatriates earn • ____________________________________________________________________• Scale ranged from 1 – 5, with higher ratings indicating stronger agreement.

Page 34: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

And in the lab….

Page 35: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Effects of Unreasonable Pay Discrepancies for Under- and Overpayment on Double Demotivation.

Carr, McLoughlin, Hodgson & MacLachlan (1996) GS&G Psychology Monographs, 122, 475-494.

Page 36: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity
Page 37: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Methodology – Sample Design• Professional workers = 1290

• Local workers = 992; expatriate = 298

• Organisations = 202

• Sectors: Aid (60), Govt (40), education (27), business (75)

• Countries:– Landlocked: Malaŵi; Uganda– Island Nations: Solomon Islands; PNG– Emerging economies: India, China

Page 38: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Methodology

a) Self-reported pay and benefits (compared using the World Bank’s “Purchasing Power Parity”)

b) Variables (with checks for common method variance): i. Self-assessed ability, pay comparison, feelings of pay

(in)justice, pay (de)motivation, thinking about turnover, thinking about international mobility, job satisfaction, work engagement

ii. Covariates: cultural values, culture shock, age, gender, experience, highest qualification, social desirability ()

c) Recommendations from in-country workshops

Page 39: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Findings (b) Consequences for Work?

Irrespective of pay group, significant predictors of de-motivation were:

1) Feelings of pay Injustice (.50)2) Remuneration Comparison (.11)

1) De-motivation predicted thinking about Turnover (.18)

2) De-motivation predicted thinking about international mobility (.13) (brain drain of locals and, to a lesser extent, early return of expatriates)

Page 40: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Impact?

• DFID/UK Aid???

• CAFOD

• UPNG

• The other side of research utiliszation?

Page 41: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

www.theaidtriangle.com

Mac MacLachlan

Page 42: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

4. What about human resources for health in Ireland from an inclusive

global health perspective?

Page 43: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Irish Times Opinion piece.

• What are the HRH challenges for Ireland in a global health context.

Page 44: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Access: Unknown cutting of HSE staff.

• Comparative data?

• IFGH ?

• HRH?

Page 45: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Migrant labour: Dependency of the Irish Health service on foreign doctors and nurses.

• Comparative data?

• IFGH ?

• HRH?

Page 46: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Inequity: Discrepancy in training and practising in the Public Health Speciality in Ireland

• Comparative Data?

• IFGH

• HRH??

Page 47: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Resource allocation:

• Huge salaries of some clinicians in the Irish public health service.

• Comparative data?

• IFGH?

• HRH?

Page 48: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Right to Practice:

• Without fear of imprisonment.

• Comparative data?

• IFGH?

• HRH?

Page 49: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• Institutional obligations

• Training of health workers.

• Comparative data?

• IFGH? – obligations too!

• HRH?

Page 50: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

• As the IFGH our credibility/integrity is dependant on how we respond to HRH issues ‘abroad’

• but also• on whether what we

would comment on abroad, we also comment on at home – using our unique comparative perspective.

• Inclusion is about giving and receiving health

• If, failing to address ‘some topics’ reflects hierarchies of dominance and agendas of exclusion – then we need to address them.

Page 51: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Conclusions

• 1. Inclusive health is about who gets it and who gives it.

• 2. Alternative cadre need to be developed on a sound scientific footing.

• 3. Aid should not be divisive, diminishing available HRH.

• 4. We should be willing to ‘include home’ in the IFGH’s HRH agenda.

Page 52: The John Kevany Lecture Human Resources & Inclusive Health Mac MacLachlan Professor of Psychology Associate Director, Centre for Global Health Trinity

Thanks You