Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Human Resources for Health 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research

The impact of austerity on the health workforce and the achievement of human resources for health policies in Ireland (2008–2014)

Published in: Human Resources for Health | Issue 1/2017

Login to get access

Abstract

Background

The global economic crisis saw recessionary conditions in most EU countries. Ireland’s severe recession produced pro-cyclical health spending cuts. Yet, human resources for health (HRH) are the most critical of inputs into a health system and an important economic driver. The aim of this article is to evaluate how the Irish health system coped with austerity in relation to HRH and whether austerity allowed and/or facilitated the implementation of HRH policy.

Methods

The authors employed a quantitative longitudinal trend analysis over the period 2008 to 2014 with Health Service Executive (HSE) staff database as the principal source. For the purpose of this study, heath service employment is defined as directly employed whole-time equivalent public service staffing in the HSE and other government agencies. The authors also examined the heath sector pay bill and sought to establish linkages between the main staff database and pay expenditure, as given in the HSE Annual Accounts and Financial Statements (AFS), and key HRH policies.

Results

The actual cut in total whole-time equivalent (WTE) of directly employed health services human resources over the period 2008 to 2014 was 8027 WTE, a reduction of 7.2% but substantially less than government claims. There was a degree of relative protection for frontline staffing decreasing by 2.9% between 2008 and 2014 and far less than the 18.5% reduction in other staff. Staff exempted from the general moratorium also increased by a combined 12.6%. Counter to stated policy, the decline in staffing of non-acute care was over double than in acute care. Further, the reduction in directly employed staff was to a great extent matched by a marked increase in agency spending.

Conclusions

The cuts forced substantial HRH reductions and yet there was some success in pursuing policy goals, such as increasing the frontline workforce while reducing support staff and protection of some cadres. Nevertheless, other policies failed such as moving staff away from acute settings and the claimed financial savings were substantially offset by overtime payments and the need to hire more expensive agency workers. There was also substantial demotivation of staff as a consequence of the changes.
Footnotes
1
The database has 1.3 m records—covering staffing by grade, contract type, gender and location.
 
2
Section 38 of the health act relates to the direct provisions of a service. All 18 voluntary hospitals and 35 mainly disability agencies fall into the category.
 
3
These figures closely relate to the increase in DCYA figures for 2014 (<80 WTE) as published by Department of Public Expenditure and Reform (Department of Public Expenditure and Reform, 2014) allowing the authors to have confidence in the figures.
 
Literature
1.
go back to reference Arie, S. 2013. Has austerity brought Europe to the brink of a health disaster? Arie, S. 2013. Has austerity brought Europe to the brink of a health disaster?
2.
go back to reference Jimei ZMY. PIIGS sovereign debt crisis and the perspective of the euro [J]. World Economy Study. 2010;11:007. Jimei ZMY. PIIGS sovereign debt crisis and the perspective of the euro [J]. World Economy Study. 2010;11:007.
3.
go back to reference Keegan C, Thomas S, Normand C, Portela C. Measuring recession severity and its impact on healthcare expenditure. Int J Health Care Finance Econ. 2013;13(2):139–55.CrossRefPubMed Keegan C, Thomas S, Normand C, Portela C. Measuring recession severity and its impact on healthcare expenditure. Int J Health Care Finance Econ. 2013;13(2):139–55.CrossRefPubMed
4.
go back to reference Burke S, Thomas S, Barry S, Keegan C. Indicators of health system coverage and activity in Ireland during the economic crisis 2008-2014 - from 'more with less' to 'less with less'. Health Policy. 2014a;117(3):275–8.CrossRefPubMed Burke S, Thomas S, Barry S, Keegan C. Indicators of health system coverage and activity in Ireland during the economic crisis 2008-2014 - from 'more with less' to 'less with less'. Health Policy. 2014a;117(3):275–8.CrossRefPubMed
5.
go back to reference OECD. OECD health statistics 2015. Paris: OECD Publishing; 2015. OECD. OECD health statistics 2015. Paris: OECD Publishing; 2015.
6.
go back to reference Thomas S, Keegan C, Barry S, Layte R, Jowett M, Normand C. A framework for assessing health system resilience in an economic crisis: Ireland as a test case. BMC Health Serv Res. 2013;13(1):450. Thomas S, Keegan C, Barry S, Layte R, Jowett M, Normand C. A framework for assessing health system resilience in an economic crisis: Ireland as a test case. BMC Health Serv Res. 2013;13(1):450.
7.
go back to reference Frenk J. The world health report 2000: expanding the horizon of health system performance. Health Policy Planning. 2010;25(5):343–5.CrossRefPubMed Frenk J. The world health report 2000: expanding the horizon of health system performance. Health Policy Planning. 2010;25(5):343–5.CrossRefPubMed
8.
go back to reference Department of Public Expenditure and Reform. 2014. Public Service Databank. In D. o. P. E. Reform (Ed.), Department of Public Expenditure & Reform - Databank. Dublin. Department of Public Expenditure and Reform. 2014. Public Service Databank. In D. o. P. E. Reform (Ed.), Department of Public Expenditure & Reform - Databank. Dublin.
9.
go back to reference Butler RBM. Public sector trends 2013. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration; 2013. Butler RBM. Public sector trends 2013. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration; 2013.
10.
go back to reference Reeves A, Basu S, McKee M, Meissner C, Stuckler D. Does investment in the health sector promote or inhibit economic growth? Glob Health. 2013;9(1):43.CrossRef Reeves A, Basu S, McKee M, Meissner C, Stuckler D. Does investment in the health sector promote or inhibit economic growth? Glob Health. 2013;9(1):43.CrossRef
11.
go back to reference Mladovsky, P., Srivastava, D., Cylus, J., Karanikolos, M., Evetovits, T., Thomson, S., & McKee, M. 2012. Health policy responses to the financial crisis in Europe. Mladovsky, P., Srivastava, D., Cylus, J., Karanikolos, M., Evetovits, T., Thomson, S., & McKee, M. 2012. Health policy responses to the financial crisis in Europe.
12.
go back to reference Thomas S, Burke S. Coping with austerity in the Irish health system. Eur Secur. 2012;18(1):7. Thomas S, Burke S. Coping with austerity in the Irish health system. Eur Secur. 2012;18(1):7.
13.
go back to reference Barrett S. The EU/IMF rescue Programme for Ireland: 2010–13. Econ Aff. 2011;31(Issue 2):54. Barrett S. The EU/IMF rescue Programme for Ireland: 2010–13. Econ Aff. 2011;31(Issue 2):54.
14.
go back to reference Alvarez-rosete A, Mays N. Reconciling two conflicting Tales of the English health policy process since 1997. British Politics. 2008;3(2):183–203.CrossRef Alvarez-rosete A, Mays N. Reconciling two conflicting Tales of the English health policy process since 1997. British Politics. 2008;3(2):183–203.CrossRef
15.
go back to reference Blyth M. Austerity: the history of a dangerous idea. New York: OUP USA; 2013. Blyth M. Austerity: the history of a dangerous idea. New York: OUP USA; 2013.
16.
go back to reference Blanchard O, Dell’Ariccia G, Mauro P. Rethinking macroeconomic policy. Journal of Money. Credit & Banking (Wiley-Blackwell). 2010;42:199–215. Blanchard O, Dell’Ariccia G, Mauro P. Rethinking macroeconomic policy. Journal of Money. Credit & Banking (Wiley-Blackwell). 2010;42:199–215.
17.
go back to reference Department of Health. Future health – a strategic framework for reform of the health service 2012-2015. Dublin: Stationery Office; 2012. Department of Health. Future health – a strategic framework for reform of the health service 2012-2015. Dublin: Stationery Office; 2012.
18.
go back to reference HSE. HSE HR circular 015/2009: moratorium on recruitment and promotions in the public services – revised employment control framework for the health services. Dublin: National Director of Human Resources; 2009. HSE. HSE HR circular 015/2009: moratorium on recruitment and promotions in the public services – revised employment control framework for the health services. Dublin: National Director of Human Resources; 2009.
19.
go back to reference National Director of Human Resources. HSE HR circular 011/2010 targeted voluntary early retirement (VER) and voluntary redundancy schemes (VRS) in order to achieve a targeted reduction in employment numbers in the public health sector. Dublin: HSE; 2010. National Director of Human Resources. HSE HR circular 011/2010 targeted voluntary early retirement (VER) and voluntary redundancy schemes (VRS) in order to achieve a targeted reduction in employment numbers in the public health sector. Dublin: HSE; 2010.
20.
go back to reference Assistant National Director of HR. Final HR figures on the voluntary retirement/voluntary redundancy schemes (VER/VRS) 2010 and request to amend employment ceiling for the health services. Dublin: HSE; 2011. Assistant National Director of HR. Final HR figures on the voluntary retirement/voluntary redundancy schemes (VER/VRS) 2010 and request to amend employment ceiling for the health services. Dublin: HSE; 2011.
21.
go back to reference Bryman A, Bell E. Business research methods 3e. Oxford: OUP Oxford; 2011. Bryman A, Bell E. Business research methods 3e. Oxford: OUP Oxford; 2011.
22.
go back to reference Chatziantoniou D, Ross KA. Partitioned optimization of complex queries. Inf Syst. 2007;32(2):248–82.CrossRef Chatziantoniou D, Ross KA. Partitioned optimization of complex queries. Inf Syst. 2007;32(2):248–82.CrossRef
23.
go back to reference Behan, J., & Skills Labour Market Research Unit. 2009. A quantitative tool for workforce planning in healthcare: example simulations: FÁS, skills and labour market research unit. Behan, J., & Skills Labour Market Research Unit. 2009. A quantitative tool for workforce planning in healthcare: example simulations: FÁS, skills and labour market research unit.
24.
go back to reference Bell ML, Fiero M, Horton NJ, Chiu-Hsieh H. Handling missing data in RCTs; a review of the top medical journals. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2014;14(1):1–16.CrossRef Bell ML, Fiero M, Horton NJ, Chiu-Hsieh H. Handling missing data in RCTs; a review of the top medical journals. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2014;14(1):1–16.CrossRef
25.
go back to reference Siddiqui O, Ali MW. A comparison of the random-effects pattern mixture model with last-observation-carried-forward (LOCF) analysis in longitudinal clinical trials with dropouts. J Biopharm Stat. 1998;8(4):545–63.CrossRefPubMed Siddiqui O, Ali MW. A comparison of the random-effects pattern mixture model with last-observation-carried-forward (LOCF) analysis in longitudinal clinical trials with dropouts. J Biopharm Stat. 1998;8(4):545–63.CrossRefPubMed
26.
go back to reference MacDermott, K., & Stone, C. 2013. Death by a thousand cuts: how governments undermine their own productivity: Centre for Policy Development. MacDermott, K., & Stone, C. 2013. Death by a thousand cuts: how governments undermine their own productivity: Centre for Policy Development.
27.
go back to reference Huerta Melchor O. The government workforce of the future. Paris: OECD Publishing; 2013. Huerta Melchor O. The government workforce of the future. Paris: OECD Publishing; 2013.
29.
go back to reference Correia T, Dussault G, Pontes C. The impact of the financial crisis on human resources for health policies in three southern-Europe countries. Health Policy. 2015;119:1600–5.CrossRefPubMed Correia T, Dussault G, Pontes C. The impact of the financial crisis on human resources for health policies in three southern-Europe countries. Health Policy. 2015;119:1600–5.CrossRefPubMed
30.
31.
go back to reference Groenewegen P, Heinemann S, GreSS, Schäfer. “Primary care practice composition in 34 countries.” Health Policy 119 (2015) 1576-1583. Groenewegen P, Heinemann S, GreSS, Schäfer. “Primary care practice composition in 34 countries.” Health Policy 119 (2015) 1576-1583.
Metadata
Title
The impact of austerity on the health workforce and the achievement of human resources for health policies in Ireland (2008–2014)
Publication date
01-12-2017
Published in
Human Resources for Health / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 1478-4491
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-017-0230-3

Other articles of this Issue 1/2017

Human Resources for Health 1/2017 Go to the issue