The health worker production–population growth dynamic
Recent health workforce projections have focused on the year 2015, since this is the end date for achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. However, the United Nations’ publication of World population prospects: The 2010 revision (2011a) brought heightened attention to population growth over the coming decades. Previously, the UN projected that the global population would peak around midcentury at 9.1 billion and then stabilize through the end of the century (United Nations 2009). However, due to persistently high and, in some cases, increasing fertility rates in some countries and somewhat lower mortality rates than those used in the 2008 revision (United Nations 2011b), the 2010 revision projects that the population will continue climbing through the end of the 21st century and beyond. By 2100, the world’s population is estimated to reach 10.1 billion.
Crisis country X:
Year: 2000
Population: 100 million
Health workers needed: 230,000
Population growth rate: 2.4%
|
Population 2050 |
Health workers
needed 2050
|
Additional health
workers needed
2000–2050
|
% increase in
health workers
needed 2000–2050
|
---|---|---|---|---|
Annual population growth rate
2000–2050: 2.0%
|
272 million | 625,200 | 395,200 | 172% |
Annual population growth rate
2000–2050: 2.4%
|
332 million | 763,600 | 533,600 | 232% |
Annual population growth rate
2000–2050: 2.8%
|
406 million | 932,700 | 702,700 |
306%
|