@jessieabbate @WHOAFRO It looks like the health system has more health workers than they did in 2016, thanks to a government scale-up. But this report shows it's still extremely low outside of cities, far below the HW/population ratio suggested by the WHO.
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
@HW4AllCoalition
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
RT @KristofDecoste1: Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvand…
Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/2xa9NvbHTp by @Rvandepas et al
Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/ayzoJ9twGM
Health workforce development and retention in Guinea: a policy analysis post-Ebola https://t.co/mseDij8PDA