DONATE

Human resources for health and international migration

Frontline human resources are key for any health care system.

In countries already severely deprived of health professionals, the loss of each individual has serious implications for the health of citizens.

In the eye care sector, the Vision 2020 target on human resources in sub-Saharan Africa was one ophthalmologist per 500,000 population by 2000. By 2003, only 13 of the 46 WHO Member States in Africa had reached this level, and 10 countries had one or fewer ophthalmologists per million people.

Even these ratios probably overestimate the availability of services because of the concentration of ophthalmologists in urban areas and the private sector. Furthermore, eye care personnel depend on a team of other specialists and more general health workers to be effective, and these staff are also in critically short supply.

Read ‘Scaling up human resources for eye health’: a case study (pdf)

Want to read more about our work?

Sightsavers and eye health
An eye health doctor wearing a smart white shirt and sunglasses.
Sightsavers Reports

Alinafe cuts the queues

Learn about one man's mission to make a difference in Malawi by training as an eye health specialist.

Zahra has her eyes examined.
Sightsavers Reports

Bringing eye health into the classroom

Zahra is one of the many children now thriving thanks to a Sightsavers programme to screen school students for eye conditions and health problems.

Hortance stands alongside a man at a Sightsavers event stand.
Sightsavers blog

Six takeaways from the International Conference for Public Health in Africa

Sightsavers’ Hortance Manjo shares insights from the event in Zambia, which highlighted eye health for the first time.

Hortance Manjo, January 2024