Health workforce
Health systems can only function with health workers; improving health service coverage and realizing the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is dependent on their availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality.

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World Health Assembly resolutions and decisions

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Highlight

The National health workforce accounts: health workforce levels and trends 2026 report provides an overview of the status of NHWA implementation and an analysis of global and regional health workforce levels and trends based on official data reported by countries to the World Health Organization. Developed to support evidence-informed health workforce policy-making and planning, the report examines progress in strengthening national health workforce information systems, data availability and reporting across countries, and the use of standardized indicators to monitor human resources for health in support of universal health coverage, the Sustainable Development Goals and other health objectives.

Drawing on the 2025 NHWA data release, the report analyses the distribution, density and composition of the health and care workforce across regions and income groups, highlighting persistent disparities in workforce availability. It also examines trends in workforce growth since 2006 and presents a thematic analysis of population ageing and health workforce ageing, assessing their implications for future workforce needs. The findings demonstrate substantial improvements in the availability and quality of health workforce data through NHWA implementation while underscoring continuing challenges related to workforce shortages, inequities in distribution and the need for sustained investment in health workforce planning and monitoring.

Questions & answers

New publications

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National health workforce accounts: health workforce levels and trends 2026

This report presents the 2026 edition of the National Health Workforce Accounts (NHWA) series, providing an overview of the status of NHWA implementation...

Competency frameworks and standards for digital health: a landscape analysis

This report analyses the landscape of digital health competency frameworks and standards developed to strengthen health workforce education and practice...

Global curriculum guide for community health workers

The contribution of community health workers (CHWs) to universal health coverage and their performance can be optimized through appropriate health workforce...

Definitions & Figures

Who are health and care workers? 

  • Health worker - Health workers are all people primarily engaged in actions with the primary intent of enhancing health. For health workers, the relevant ISCO codes are generally found within the "Health Professionals" (Sub-Major Group 22) and "Health Associate Professionals" (Minor Group 325) categories, with more specific unit groups depending on the type of health work. 
  • Heath care assistant (ISCO-08 code: 5321) - Institution-based personal care workers who provide direct personal care and assistance with activities of daily living to patients and residents in a variety of health care settings such as hospitals, clinics and residential nursing care facilities. They generally work in implementation of established care plans and practices, and under the direct supervision of medical, nursing or other health professionals or associate professionals.
  • Home-based personal care workers (ISCO-08 code: 5322) who provide routine personal care and assistance with activities of daily living to persons who are in need of such care due to effects of ageing, illness, injury, or other physical or mental conditions, in private homes and other independent residential settings. 

Key figures

The estimated stock of health workers now exceeds 70 million. Shortage estimates decreased steadily since the Global Strategy adoption in 2026, trends that may be linked to investment decisions, the adoption of evidence-based policies and improved data availability.

The pace of progress has slowed, however, and masks diverging trends across and within regions, prompting an upward adjustment to the projected workforce shortage by 2030 to 11 million (compared to the 2022 estimate of a projected 10 million shortage by 2030).

Women comprise 67% of the global health workforce.

 

Ebola occupational health resources

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Publications

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National health workforce accounts: health workforce levels and trends 2026

This report presents the 2026 edition of the National Health Workforce Accounts (NHWA) series, providing an overview of the status of NHWA implementation...

Competency frameworks and standards for digital health: a landscape analysis

This report analyses the landscape of digital health competency frameworks and standards developed to strengthen health workforce education and practice...

Infection prevention and control guideline for Ebola and Marburg diseases

This document provides public health advice on multisectoral actions to support the social and economic protection of communities affected by Ebola and...

Technical briefs

External publications

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Technical documents

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Independent Stakeholders Reports International Code of Practice Recruitment 2024 cover

This document is a combined summary of international stakeholder responses for the fifth round of reporting on the Global Code of Practice on the International...

To better understand and respond to the urgent challenges that countries are facing in terms of the impact on health systems caused by recent suspensions...

Front cover of Working for Health brochure 2024

Working for Health: Optimize, build and strengthen the health and care workforce is a non-technical brochure that gives an overview of the Working for...

External resources

Multimedia & speeches

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COVID-19 resources

What the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed: the findings of five global health workforce professions

Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO asserted that a holistic assessment of the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact is needed and accordingly formulated a...

HWF C19 cover

This guide consolidates COVID-19 guidance for human resources for health managers and policy-makers at national, subnational and facility levels to design,...

The role of community health workers in COVID-19 vaccination: Implementation support guide

This guide is intended to support national governments developing their national deployment and vaccination plans (NDVPs) for COVID-19 vaccines by outlining...

Joint WHO/ILO policy guidelines on improving health worker access to prevention, treatment
and care services for HIV and TB

This document presents an evidence-informed policy for the provision of improved access to HIV and TB prevention, treatment, care and support for health...

Infection prevention and control in the context of coronavirus disease (COVID-19): a living guideline, 13 January 2023

  The Infection prevention and control in the context of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): a living guideline consolidates infection...

The impact of COVID-19 on health and care workers: a closer look at deaths

WHO estimates that between 80 000 and 180 000 health and care workers could have died from COVID-19 in the period between January 2020 to May 2021, converging...

Impact of COVID-19 on human resources for health and policy response: the case of Plurinational State of Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru

In the International Year of Health and Care Workers (2021) and in an effort to support countries in the design and implementation of strategies to address...

impact covid-19 caribbean cover

Health workers are crucial in the preparedness and response to COVID-19, but the pandemic has evidenced the shortage of human resources for health (HRH)...

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