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New WHO report reveals failures in hiring, retention of Africa’s health workers

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Africa is producing more health workers than ever before, yet millions still lack access to care, hundreds of thousands remain unemployed, and many are leaving the continent, a new report by the World Health Organisation (WHO) has revealed.

Launched on May 6, 2026, during the Second Africa Health Workforce Investment Forum in Accra, the report, State of the Health Workforce in Africa 2026: Plan. Train. Retain exposes a worsening crisis driven not just by training gaps, but by failures in employment, distribution and retention.

Africa’s health workforce has grown significantly, rising to 5.72 million in 2024 from 4.3 million in 2018. Despite this progress, the continent still has only 46% of the health workers it needs, leaving millions without essential services.

The report highlights a troubling, widespread shortage alongside high unemployment. In 2024 alone, about 943,000 trained health workers were jobless, even as health systems struggle with understaffing.

Ghana’s Vice President, Prof Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang, underscored the urgency of the situation, stating that “Africa’s future depends on the strength of its human capital,” adding that investing in health workers is “not just a health priority, it is an economic and development imperative.”

Echoing this, Ghana’s Health Minister, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, said “training alone is not enough,” stressing the need to “create jobs, strengthen skills, and retain talent.”

Although the WHO has slightly revised Africa’s projected health workforce shortage from 6.1 million to 5.85 million by 2030, the report warns that the improvement is fragile and could easily reverse without stronger investment and reforms.

According to the WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr Mohamed Yakub Janabi, the crisis has evolved beyond mere shortages. He noted that “the crisis is no longer defined by scarcity alone,” warning that “too many remain unemployed while millions go without care.”

Training capacity has expanded, with over 325,000 graduates each year. However, weak alignment between education systems and job markets means many graduates remain unemployed or stuck in insecure roles.

Even where workers are available, the quality of care remains a concern. The report says that health professionals correctly diagnose only about 62% of cases and provide appropriate treatment in just 40%, exposing patients to preventable risks.

It also looks at retention as another growing challenge. Nearly 46% of health workers are considering migration due to poor working conditions and limited career opportunities. At the same time, absenteeism continues to drain health systems, costing up to 20% of wage bills.

Despite these setbacks, the report makes a strong investment case. Every US$1 invested in the health workforce could generate up to 10 times in financial returns and over 30 times in broader social and economic benefits.

To close the gap, countries are urged to increase spending by about US$4 per person annually or expand workforce budgets by roughly 15% each year.

As leaders convene in Accra, they are expected to review progress under the Africa Health Workforce Investment Charter and mobilise new commitments. The forum will also unveil the Africa Health Workforce Agenda 2026–2035, a strategy aimed at transforming how countries plan, train and retain health workers across the continent.

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.


Source: www.myjoyonline.com
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