Intended for healthcare professionals

Analysis Addressing the Growing NCD Burden Among Women And Children

Building an interdisciplinary workforce for prevention and control of non-communicable diseases: the role of e-learning

BMJ 2023; 381 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj-2022-071071 (Published 23 May 2023) Cite this as: BMJ 2023;381:e071071

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  1. Svetlana Akselrod, director1,
  2. Téa E Collins, lead2,
  3. Connie Hoe, assistant professor3,
  4. Julia Seyer, senior medical adviser4,
  5. Kate Tulenko, consultant5,
  6. Flaminia Ortenzi, consultant5,
  7. Daria Berlina, technical offier6,
  8. Howard Sobel, WHO representative7
  1. 1Global NCD Platform, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  2. 2Global NCD Platform, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  3. 3Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA
  4. 4World Medical Association, Ferney-Voltaire, France
  5. 5Global NCD Platform, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  6. 6Global NCD Platform, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  7. 7Maternal Child Health and Quality Safety, World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific, Manila, Philippines
  1. Correspondence to: T E Collins collinst{at}who.int

Svetlana Akselrod and colleagues argue that interdisciplinary education for health workers, including through e-learning programmes, can help improve the quality of integrated care for non-communicable diseases

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes, and mental health conditions, are a threat to human health, causing 74% of global deaths annually.1 Three quarters of these deaths occur in low and middle income countries, where health systems are least prepared to deal with the growing burden of chronic disease. NCDs represent a complex interplay of genetic, behavioural, social, economic, cultural, environmental, and commercial factors.1 The convergence of the growing NCD burden, multimorbidites, and rapid technological advances calls for integrated models of chronic care that include interventions and services for health promotion, disease prevention, diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation, and palliative care.234

To provide such a broad range of interventions, especially when faced with weak and fragmented health systems in resource poor settings, it is important to strengthen the capacities of the existing health workforce and train additional interdisciplinary staff and equip them with the unique skills required to prevent and manage NCDs.256789 However, concern is growing that education programmes have not kept pace with the changing demographic and epidemiological trends or the need for integrated delivery of services by interdisciplinary teams.

We argue more must be done to tackle the challenge of building an interdisciplinary health workforce for the prevention and control of NCDs. Current health workforce constraints may threaten the provision of good quality integrated care for NCDs and we need to rethink education for an interdisciplinary NCD workforce in response. Online learning, with a focus on continuing professional development, presents an opportunity to start to tackle this education gap.

Challenges to building an interdisciplinary workforce

Important barriers may impede the delivery of integrated health services, including governance and operational difficulties, weak regulatory capacities, unclear financial responsibilities, and other barriers related to the context, health system, socioeconomic environment, and culture.210 While these system level challenges can affect the availability, accessibility, and affordability of integrated care for NCDs, we focus on challenges with the health workforce that affect the quality of services.

Health workforce shortages and maldistribution

Shortages of health workers and an inadequate skills mix—different types of staff in a team or healthcare setting11—limit access to essential healthcare and threaten the implementation of integrated care for NCDs. According to the World Health Organization’s assessment of the health workforce for the year 2020, the world lacks 15 million health workers, with the greatest shortages experienced by the WHO African, Eastern Mediterranean, and South-East Asian regions. This number is expected to increase to 18 million by 2030.1213 A 2022 systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease study 2019 based on data from 2000 to 2019 highlighted an even larger gap in the global health workforce of more than 43 million health workers, including 6.4 million physicians, 30.6 million nurses and midwives, 3.3 million dentistry personnel, and 2.9 million pharmaceutical personnel.14 Despite the variation in estimates because of methodological differences, the global health workforce shortages are a threat to achieving universal health coverage and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).21014151617

The shortage of health workers is further compounded by their uneven distribution across geographical regions. For example, the density of physicians in central Europe, eastern Europe, and central Asia is 38.3 per 10 000 population, more than twice the global average of 16.7 per 10 000 and 13 times higher than in sub-Saharan Africa.14 Similar disparities apply to the density of nurses and midwives, estimated at 73.5 per 10 000 population in central Europe, eastern Europe, and central Asia, compared with 9.7 per 10 000 in South Asia.14 Disparities also exist within countries, with a greater concentration of health workers in urban areas.21014151617

Medical schools and other healthcare training institutions are also unequally distributed across the world. For example, according to the World Directory of Medical Schools, about 3300 recognised medical schools exist globally, with 530 in India, followed by Brazil (332), the USA (195), and China (164).18 Together, these four countries account for one third of all medical schools globally, while many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have either no medical school or only one.19 Countries that lack training facilities are less likely to have adequate numbers of healthcare professionals in the workforce.

NCD education and competencies

The knowledge of NCD-related issues, even among highly educated health workers, is still often inadequate, particularly in low and middle income countries.102021 Evidence shows that the health workforce is often not equipped with the necessary skills to work across specialties and levels, and along a continuum of care, for the provision of integrated care.22 The ability to work in interdisciplinary teams is essential to the delivery of good quality integrated NCD services.2324 However, building effective interdisciplinary teams can be challenging. Tensions between occupational groups and specialties can arise because of misalignment of priorities and professional values, lack of trust, and concerns about one’s roles being taken by others.25 As a result, healthcare teams can revert to profession based teams rather than more patient centred ones.5 Lack of incentives and support systems for health workers to deliver integrated health services, especially in low and middle income countries, can result in reduced motivation and low confidence, and in turn affect health worker performance.10202126

Rethinking education and training needs

Collaborative practice and interdisciplinary education have long been considered best practices for supporting health workers to integrate NCDs into routine health services to improve the quality and efficiency of these services. Despite this evidence, collaborative practice and interdisciplinary education are often not implemented in clinical settings.2152227 WHO has identified six competency domains for health workers that are essential for the provision of good quality integrated care and the achievement of universal health coverage (box 1).28

Box 1

Competency domains for health workers essential for the delivery of good quality integrated care

  • People centredness—The ability to provide integrated health services that incorporate the perspectives of individuals, caregivers, families, and communities as participants in and beneficiaries of health systems, along a continuum of care and over the life course.

  • Decision making—The ability to take an adaptive, solution oriented, collaborative, and rigorous approach to decision making, based on systems thinking and problem solving.

  • Communication—The ability to proactively manage interactions with others, including active listening and adapting language to the audience, goals, needs, urgency, and sensitivity of the interaction.

  • Collaboration—The ability to engage in collaborative practice and work effectively within interdisciplinary teams, demonstrating the capacity to: build and maintain trusting relationships; learn from, with, and about others; and manage conflicts.

  • Evidence informed practice—The ability to adapt the clinical practice to the best available evidence, and to assess and continually improve the services delivered based on new knowledge and skills acquired, by contributing to a culture of safety and ongoing quality improvement.

  • Personal conduct—A series of self-governed behaviours, comprising working within the limits of competence and scope of practice; demonstrating high standards of ethical conduct; engaging in lifelong learning; and managing own health and wellbeing.

  • Source: WHO, 2022.28

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When health workers are provided with opportunities to train within interdisciplinary teams in clinical settings and can benefit from multidisciplinary education, they are more likely to implement interdisciplinary approaches in the workplace. This can in turn contribute to improvements in the quality of services provided and patient outcomes.29 Examples of such interdisciplinary training are the paediatric advanced life support and adult advanced cardiovascular support courses offered by the American Heart Association, where different health professionals engaged in responding to cardiovascular and respiratory emergencies take part in clinical scenarios and simulations that require them to collaborate with colleagues to assess and treat patients.30

Moreover, interdisciplinary education has the potential to strengthen health workers’ leadership, communication, problem solving, and critical thinking abilities. Such education also prepares them for working in interdisciplinary teams by enhancing mutual accountability, consolidating interprofessional relationships, and promoting a patient centred approach in clinical practice.7 However, education systems in most countries are ill prepared for interdisciplinary learning based on non-traditional teaching methods which break down professional silos and smooth the transition from training to interdisciplinary clinical practice. Interdisciplinary learning is still not integrated into pre-service education and post-qualifying education, including continuing professional development programmes or within health workforce planning policies and strategies.31

Sustainable investment in interdisciplinary education of the health workforce is crucial to building the skills and capacities of the NCD workforce. Improving access to knowledge is an important step, and interest is growing in technological advances for interdisciplinary learning for prospective and existing health workers and the development of their collaborative competencies.3132

Role of e-learning in continuing professional development

Recent digital developments are revolutionising the way lifelong learning is provided. E-learning—the use of information and communications technology for education and training—for continuing health workforce education is growing in popularity globally, particularly in the context of the covid-19 pandemic, and most participants have been satisfied with the experience.1133 WHO considers that e-learning is likely to be as effective as traditional health workforce education and that participants acquire knowledge and skills through e-learning just as well as through traditional teaching.34

E-learning increases access to education worldwide, including in geographically isolated locations or those with insufficient local training institutions.1135 Health workers in rural communities often have limited access to continuing professional development opportunities, such as on topics related to mental health. Online programmes have been successfully used to deliver this continuing education to healthcare workers in both developed and low resource settings where the necessary technologies are available,1136 with high levels of satisfaction among participants, increased awareness of mental health issues, and greater confidence in mental health interventions.3738

When designed appropriately, e-learning offers individualised approaches to education for both self learning and facilitated group learning delivered in a blended format. The use of e-learning technologies such as discussion forums and online platforms for facilitated peer learning could also improve the quality of interdisciplinary, collaborative learning and encourage interprofessional interactions.39 Although online continuing education has several advantages, successful implementation also has challenges (table 1).

Table 1

Advantages and challenges of online continuing professional development programmes

View this table:

Box 2 outlines a successful example of the implementation of online training courses for the health workforce which illustrates the potential of e-learning to improve access to and the quality of health workforce education.

Box 2

Role of professional associations in innovative learning solutions

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) is increasingly a global problem, and it is particularly challenging to treat in resource poor settings where most cases occur. To improve the quality of care for TB the World Medical Association, in collaboration with WHO and the Global Tuberculosis Institute of the State University of New Jersey, and supported by the Eli Lilly TB Partnership,55 launched a refresher course as a free online tool for physicians to learn and test their knowledge on TB.

The course aims to assist doctors in delivering high quality, effective care when diagnosing, treating, and managing patients with TB. Although the course is mainly aimed at doctors, it may also be useful for nurses and other members of the healthcare team.

The course is based on the International Standards for Tuberculosis Care (ISTC). The ISTC provides a set of widely accepted, evidence based standards that all clinicians should seek to achieve. The course offers clinical care information on TB including diagnostics, treatment regimens, and management of multidrug-resistant TB. It also includes sections on patient-clinician interaction, how to ensure patient adherence to treatment, and infection control. The general principles and standards emphasised in the course are intended for use in different countries and regions.

High user satisfaction with the course led the World Medical Association to launch a new application for tablet computers that will allow doctors to access the course offline. The convenience of access to learning resources everywhere and at any time provides doctors with the opportunity to improve the quality of care they deliver and achieve better health outcomes for their patients. The course has been translated into other languages and is accredited by the Norwegian Medical Association. Based on the initial feedback from members of the World Medical Association, the course has already contributed to the improvement in the quality of care processes, but further evaluation will be required to document the improved health outcomes.

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When designing programmes for continuing professional development and choosing delivery methods, due consideration should be given to equity. For example: a wide and varied cross section of the health workforce should be included; content should be provided in multiple languages (in low and middle income countries sufficient content is lacking in Arabic, French, and Spanish as compared with English); barriers to access should be tackled, including narrowing the digital divide between high and low and middle income countries, and within countries; and the participation of women and other under-represented groups should be encouraged.35

The delivery method should also be selected based on the type and complexity of the content, the skills, goals, and experiences of the intended audience, and the availability of resources.35 For example, self directed learning allows participants to choose when and how to engage with the training material and tailor their learning experience to their needs, time constraints, and learning objectives.35 The combination of online and face-to-face methods allows participants to enjoy the flexibility of e-learning while being able to collaborate with colleagues in person.3556 However, this blended approach to learning is not always possible because of resource, logistical, and time constraints, in which case fully online training programmes are a valuable solution.

Finally, organisational cultures that promote the continuous development of staff and provide adequate support—including funding for courses, designated time for training during work hours, and use of office equipment—are essential to enable health workers to engage in programmes for continuing professional development.3557 Supportive organisational environments will help managers to see the value of continuing education as part of the responsibilities of health workers’ jobs, rather than as a burdensome additional task.3558 An effective strategy to incentivise both health workers and their managers is to offer recognised certification upon completion of programmes for continuing professional development.59

Conclusion

Integrated care has great potential to tackle the growing burden of NCDs. Yet, the severe shortage and inadequate skill mix of the healthcare workforce hamper the delivery of continuous, well coordinated care that is responsive to population needs. The effectiveness and efficiency of pre-service and continuing professional education need to be improved to build an interdisciplinary NCD health workforce that is knowledgeable about population based interventions, not just disease specific services.

Online innovative teaching methods and platforms are crucial to fill gaps in access to and quality of education for the healthcare workforce. However, to increase the uptake and effectiveness of e-learning programmes, the challenges of feasibility, usability, and acceptability need to be overcome. Well constructed evaluations that go beyond participant feedback will be required, particularly in low and middle income countries, to understand the effect of online courses on learning outcomes and, ultimately, the quality of integrated care. At the health system level, changes in health workforce policies and practices should move away from stand alone or vertical NCD interventions towards more comprehensive approaches with investment in the integration of NCDs into other programmatic areas (eg, maternal and child health care and HIV) and delivery platforms as part of countries’ efforts towards universal health coverage.

Key messages

  • Effective and efficient pre-service and continuing professional education are needed to prepare an interdisciplinary health workforce for the prevention and control of NCDs

  • Collaborative practice and interdisciplinary education can help health workers to integrate NCDs into routine care and improve the quality and efficiency of services, but they are often not integrated into educational and clinical settings

  • Well designed e-learning programmes, supported with evidence of their effectiveness and acceptability, can increase access to good quality education worldwide

  • Comprehensive evaluations of e-learning programmes is needed to understand the effect of e-learning on health worker competencies and the quality of integrated care

Acknowledgments

We thank James Campbell, Siobhan Fitzpatrick, and Onyema Ajuebor for their feedback.

Footnotes

  • Contributors and sources:All authors have experience and expertise in continuing education, online training, and health workforce development. SA and TC conceived the paper and wrote the first draft. JS, KT, CH, and HS provided examples of successful e-learning programmes. All authors contributed intellectual content, provided specific inputs on their areas of expertise, edited the manuscript, and approved the final version for submission. The views are those of the authors and may not reflect those of the institutions with which they are affiliated.

  • Competing interests: We have read and understood BMJ policy on declaration of interests and have no relevant interests to declare.

  • Provenance and peer review: Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • This article is part of a series commissioned by The BMJ based on a proposal from the World Health Organization. The BMJ retained full editorial control over external peer review, editing, and publication. WHO paid the open access fees.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution IGO License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo/), which permits use, distribution, and reproduction for non-commercial purposes in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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