Reinventing primary health care in the Greece of austerity: the role of health-care workers

Background The Greek primary health-care system (PHC) seems to be suffering the most from the economic crisis because of understaffing and misdistribution of the health workforce and the shortage of medical supplies and diagnostic equipment. Aims The objective of the paper is to present for the first time in public national health-care workforce census data for the first two years of the economic recession and the adopted bailout mechanism (2010 and 2011) (a) to evaluate the adequacy of the governmental effort in terms of organization and management of the health-care workforce in PHC; and (b) to identify constraints and opportunities for the development of an integrated PHC ensuring access to health-care services for all. Methods Data were drawn from the national project ‘Health Monitoring Indicators System: Health Map’ coordinated scientifically by the National School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology. They referred to the 202 PHCs and their regional surgeries (with 98% response rate). Descriptive statistics and frequency distributions were used for the analysis. Findings The findings pointed that PHC absorbs a very limited part of the national health system's workforce. Important inequalities in the numerical and geographical allocation of the PHC health workforce specialties across the country in favor of the medical profession and to the detriment of rural areas and the islands were identified, raising concerns about the policymakers’ ability to meet the emerging needs of the population, as the retrospective study of the health-care workforce, since 2010, reveals that the numerical and per type allocations remained almost unchanged. These results were in line with previous studies showcasing the lack of holistic approach for PHC questioning the restrictive spending policy (ie, salary and benefit cuts for the health-care professionals, important discharges and nonrenewal of the personnel) adopted in the public health-care sector.

[1]  Martin McKee,et al.  Austerity: a failed experiment on the people of Europe. , 2012, Clinical medicine.

[2]  Kostas Kounetas,et al.  How efficient are Greek hospitals? A case study using a double bootstrap DEA approach , 2013, The European Journal of Health Economics.

[3]  L. Liaropoulos Greek economic crisis: not a tragedy for health , 2012, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[4]  K. Walshe,et al.  Health systems and policy research in Europe: Horizon 2020 , 2013, The Lancet.

[5]  Claude Giorno,et al.  Improving the Performance of the Public Health Care System in Greece , 2009 .

[6]  Geoffrey T Fong,et al.  Comparative impact of smoke-free legislation on smoking cessation in three European countries. , 2012, European journal of public health.

[7]  S. Bonovas,et al.  High-burden epidemics in Greece in the era of economic crisis. Early signs of a public health tragedy. , 2012, Journal of preventive medicine and hygiene.

[8]  Alexander E. Kentikelenis,et al.  Economic crisis, austerity and the Greek public health system. , 2012, European journal of public health.

[9]  Christopher Dye,et al.  Universal voluntary HIV testing with immediate antiretroviral therapy as a strategy for elimination of HIV transmission: a mathematical model , 2009, The Lancet.

[10]  A. While,et al.  Should nurses be leaders of integrated health care? , 2007, Journal of nursing management.

[11]  D. Anagnostopoulos,et al.  The state of child and adolescent psychiatry in Greece during the international financial crisis: a brief report , 2013, European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

[12]  T. Roumeliotaki,et al.  Evaluation of Shared EHR Services in Primary Healthcare Centers and their Rural Community Offices: the Twister Story , 2007, Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

[13]  A. Philalithis,et al.  Primary health care nursing staff in Crete: an emerging profile. , 2006, International nursing review.

[14]  C. Lionis,et al.  Capacity building within primary healthcare nursing: a current European challenge. , 2008, Quality in primary care.

[15]  Dimitris Zavras,et al.  Impact of economic crisis and other demographic and socio-economic factors on self-rated health in Greece. , 2013, European journal of public health.

[16]  M. Suhrcke,et al.  Health systems, health, and wealth: a European perspective , 2009, The Lancet.

[17]  M. Matsaganis The welfare state and the crisis: the case of Greece , 2011 .

[18]  S. Den Bleyker Family nursing. , 1970, Frontier Nursing Service quarterly bulletin.

[19]  J. Bryant,et al.  Alma-Ata and Primary Health Care: An Evolving Story , 2008 .

[20]  C. Rousseau,et al.  Immigrant Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: The Relationship between the Perspective of the Professionals and the Parents' Point of View. , 2013, Journal of the Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry = Journal de l'Academie canadienne de psychiatrie de l'enfant et de l'adolescent.

[21]  Charalambos Economou,et al.  Greece: Health system review. , 2010, Health systems in transition.

[22]  M. Mckee,et al.  Health systems, health and wealth: the argument for investment applies now more than ever. , 2012, Social science & medicine.

[23]  Richard Horton,et al.  The global financial crisis: an acute threat to health , 2009, The Lancet.

[24]  Margaret Chan Return to Alma-Ata , 2008, The Lancet.

[25]  N. Fahy Who is shaping the future of European health systems? , 2012, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[26]  M. Mckee,et al.  How government spending cuts put lives at risk , 2010, Nature.

[27]  C. Dervenis,et al.  Restructuring the Finances of the Greek Health Care System in the Era of Economic Crisis , 2013, World Journal of Surgery.

[28]  Y. Tountas,et al.  Reforming the reform: the Greek National Health System in transition. , 2002, Health policy.