Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Montrer: 20 | 50 | 100
Résultats 1 - 12 de 12
Filtrer
1.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med ; 16(1): e1-e4, 2024 Jul 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39099275

RÉSUMÉ

The primary healthcare (PHC) rotation places medical students in rural district hospitals for 4 weeks during their 4th or 5th year. This rotation is a collaboration among three academic units at Stellenbosch University's Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. Learning activities during this rotation include participation in a longitudinal community-oriented primary care project, conducting rehabilitation-oriented home visits to persons with disabilities, and assessing and treating patients presenting with undifferentiated problems on an in- and outpatient basis. Working in rural contexts for a month affords students opportunities to foster meaningful relationships with the healthcare team, patients and the community, while learning about collaborative teamwork and communities. Critical reflections about the interprofessional care of patients and a community evaluation are key components of the students' learning and assessment. Demonstrating the importance of interprofessional collaboration in PHC, this integrated training model has received, and continues to receive, positive feedback from students and the clinicians involved. Attention to logistics and academic support plays a crucial role in ensuring optimal learning for students. An integrated approach that involves multiple academic units, various healthcare professions and communities is strongly recommended for those who are considering training students in rural PHC environments.


Sujet(s)
Soins de santé primaires , Services de santé ruraux , Étudiant médecine , Humains , République d'Afrique du Sud , Enseignement médical premier cycle/méthodes , Comportement coopératif , Relations interprofessionnelles
2.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med ; 16(1): e1-e4, 2024 Apr 22.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38708731

RÉSUMÉ

Longitudinal integrated clerkships (LICs) are effective in promoting careers in rural primary health care environments. This model of training medical professionals involves longer clinical placements of medical students and a different approach to learning which better prepares them for primary health care practice. Stellenbosch University created a LIC in 2011 for this purpose and has trained almost 100 doctors in their yearlong LIC since then. The past 12 years have brought about a lot of learning as this model of training was implemented, developed, and refined to suit the needs of students and the clinical environments.Contribution: Countries across the globe face challenges in recruiting and retaining doctors in rural primary health care environments. Longitudinal integrated clerkships have several educational benefits in addition to increase recruitment and retention of rural doctors, and 12 years of experience have led to a greater understanding regarding implementation and outcomes of an LIC in the South African context.


Sujet(s)
Stage de formation clinique , Services de santé ruraux , Étudiant médecine , Humains , République d'Afrique du Sud , Soins de santé primaires , Enseignement médical premier cycle , Choix de carrière
3.
BMC Med Educ ; 22(1): 183, 2022 Mar 16.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35296325

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Distributed training has been cited as an opportunity that offers transformative learning experiences in preparing a future workforce to address local needs. For this reason, rural and longitudinal placements are increasingly being adopted by medical schools across the world. Place, participation and person are considered integral in the process of transformation of medical students into responsive graduates on the distributed platform. This article aims to explore the experiences and perceptions of student learning on a rural training platform in South Africa while considering the interrelation between person, place and participation as a process of transformation to becoming a health care professional. The research forms part of a 5-year longitudinal case study, initiated in 2019 to explore a university-rural hospital collaboration on students, staff and the local health care system. METHODS: Data was collected using interviews and surveys from 63 purposively selected and consenting participants between January and November of 2019. All qualitative data were inductively analysed using an interpretivist approach to thematic analysis for the purposes of this article. All quantitative data was analysed descriptively using Microsoft Excel. Ethics and permission for this research was granted by the Stellenbosch University Human Research Ethics Committee, the Undergraduate Students Programme Committee and the Northern Cape Department of Health, South Africa. FINDINGS: Four themes, namely: authenticity of context; participation in a community of practice and social activities; supervision and reflection; and distance support were extracted from the data. These findings contribute to the theory of transformative learning on the distributed platform by expanding on the interrelationship of person, place and participation, specifically as it relates to participation within various communities and practices. The value of active participation in reflection and supervision, distance academic support and social support systems are explored. CONCLUSIONS: The three dimensions and interrelationship of person, place and participation in the process of transformative learning on the rural training platform can be further unpacked by exploring the types of participation that have facilitated student learning in this research context. Participation in interprofessional teams; supervision, reflection and distance support appear to be the most crucial elements during this transformative learning process.


Sujet(s)
Enseignement médical premier cycle , Étudiant médecine , Enseignement médical premier cycle/méthodes , Humains , Apprentissage , Population rurale , République d'Afrique du Sud
4.
S Afr Fam Pract (2004) ; 64(1): e1-e8, 2022 02 28.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35261259

RÉSUMÉ

Wound care management and the dressing of wounds represent some of the most basic services offered in primary health care facilities across Southern Africa. Clinicians should have a basic understanding of the processes of wound healing and wound bed preparation to match the ideal cost-effective dressing to the particular type of wound to be managed. In the 'kingdom of wounds', the authors use a popular analogy and propose the best five strategies for the clinician in choosing the right management option in the 'game of dressings'.


Sujet(s)
Pansements hydrocolloïdaux , Surdité , Afrique australe , Humains , Soins de santé primaires , Cicatrisation de plaie
5.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med ; 13(1): e1-e5, 2021 Aug 10.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34476976

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic hit South Africa in March 2020, severely disrupting health services and health education. This fundamentally impacted the training of future health professionals and catalysed a significant response from across the health education sector. In 2020, the South African Association of Health Educationalists requested members to submit reflections on different aspects of their COVID-19 related educational responses.Responding to the pandemic: Seven vignettes focused specifically on clinical training in the context of primary care and family medicine. This short report highlights the key insights that emerged from these vignettes, considering what has been learnt in terms of health professions education and what we need to take forward. These insights include building on what was already in place, the student role, technology in the clinical learning context, taking workshops online, vulnerability and presence and the way going forward. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The contributions emphasised the value of existing relationships between the health services and training institutions, collaboration and transparent communication between stakeholders when navigating a crisis, responsiveness to the changed platform and dynamic environment and aligning teaching with healthcare needs. It is more important than ever to set explicit goals, have clarity of purpose when designing learning opportunities and to provide support to students. Some of these learning points may be appropriate for similar contexts in Africa. How we inculcate what we have learned into the post-pandemic period will bear testimony to the extent to which this crisis has enabled us to re-imagine health professions education.


Sujet(s)
COVID-19 , Médecine de famille , Humains , Pandémies , SARS-CoV-2 , République d'Afrique du Sud
6.
Front Public Health ; 9: 601026, 2021.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33959577

RÉSUMÉ

Background: In 2018, Stellenbosch University's Ukwanda Centre for Rural Health led a faculty initiative to expand undergraduate health professions training to a new site, 9 hours drive from the health sciences campus in the sparsely populated Northern Cape Province of South Africa in the town of Upington. This is part of a faculty strategy to extend undergraduate health sciences training into an under-resourced part of the country, where there is no medical school. During 2019, the first year of implementation, four final year medical students undertook a longitudinal integrated clerkship at this site, while final year students from other programmes undertook short 5-week rotations, with plans for extending rotations and including more disciplines in 2020. The aim of this study was to understand stakeholder perceptions regarding the development of Upington as a rural clinical training site and how this influenced existing services, workforce sustainability and health professions education. Methods: An iterative thematic analysis of qualitative data collected from 55 participants between January and November 2019 was conducted as part of the case study. A constructivist approach to data collection was utilized to explore participants' perceptions, experiences and understanding of the new training site. Triangulation of data collection and reflexive thematic analysis contributed to the trustworthiness of the data and credibility of the findings. Findings: The perceptions of three key groups of stakeholders are reported: (1) Dr. Harry Surtie Hospital and Academic Programme Managers; (2) Supervising and non-supervising clinical staff and (3) Students from three undergraduate programs of the Faculty. Five themes emerged regarding the development of the site. The themes include the process of development; the influence on the health service; workforce sustainability; a change in perspective and equipping a future workforce. Discussion: This case study provides data to support the value of establishing a rural clinical training platform in a resource constrained environment. The influence of the expansion initiative on the current workforce speaks to the potential for improved capacity and competence in patient management with an impact on encouraging a rural oriented workforce. Using this case study to explore how the establishment of a new rural clinical training site is perceived to influence rural workforce sustainability and pathways, may have relevance to other institutions in similar settings. The degree of sustainability of the clinical training initiative is explored.


Sujet(s)
Main-d'oeuvre en santé , Services de santé ruraux , Humains , Écoles de médecine , République d'Afrique du Sud , Effectif
10.
BMC Med Educ ; 14: 228, 2014 Oct 22.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25335697

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: There is a dire need to expand the capacity of institutions in Africa to educate health care professionals. Family physicians, as skilled all-rounders at district level, are potentially well placed to contribute to an extended training platform in this context. To play this role, they need to both have an understanding of their specialist role that incorporates teaching and be equipped for their role as trainers of current and future health workers and specialists. A teaching and learning capacity-building module was introduced into a new master's programme in family medicine at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. We report on the influence of this module on graduates after the first six years. METHODS: A qualitative study was undertaken, interviewing thirteen graduates of the programme. Thematic analysis of data was done by a team comprising tutors and graduates of the programme and an independent researcher. Ethical clearance was obtained. RESULTS: The module influenced knowledge, skills and attitudes of respondents. Perceptions and evidence of changes in behaviour, changes in practice beyond the individual respondent and benefits to students and patients were apparent. Factors underlying these changes included the role of context and the role of personal factors. Contextual factors included clinical workload and opportunity pressure i.e., the pressure and responsibility to undertake teaching. Personal factors comprised self-confidence, modified attitudes and perceptions towards the roles of a family physician and towards learning and teaching, in addition to the acquisition of knowledge and skills in teaching and learning. The interaction between opportunity pressure and self-confidence influenced the application of what was learned about teaching. CONCLUSIONS: A module on teaching and learning influenced graduates' perceptions of, and self-reported behaviour relating to, teaching as practicing family physicians. This has important implications for educating family physicians in and for Africa and indirectly on expanding capacity to educate health care professionals in Africa.


Sujet(s)
Pays en voie de développement , Corps enseignant et administratif en médecine , Médecine de famille/enseignement et éducation , Rôle médical , Adulte , Attitude du personnel soignant , Compétence clinique , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Mentors , Adulte d'âge moyen , République d'Afrique du Sud , Enseignement , Effectif
11.
Afr. j. health prof. educ ; 2(2): 9-13, 2010. ilus
Article de Anglais | AIM (Afrique) | ID: biblio-1256904

RÉSUMÉ

Chronic wounds afflict millions worldwide; incurring significant health care costs and chronic suffering. Clinicians are often unsure about treatment; resulting in poor outcomes. Objective. To determine the scope of knowledge possessed by fifth-year medical students; general practitioners (GPs) and surgical registrars; concerning chronic wound management. Design. Cross-sectional study.Methods. Deans of eight South African medical schools received letters requesting information regarding time devoted to wound-care training. Knowledge-based questionnaires were distributed to final-year students at two universities; surgical registrars at four universities and GPs attending refresher courses. Results. Four medical schools replied; of whom only two offered formal teaching. 162 medical students; 45 GPs and 47 surgical registrars completed questionnaires. The overall median (25th - 75th percentiles) knowledge scores for registrars; GPs and students were 65(55 - 70); 55(45 - 65) and 45(35 - 50) respectively. Whereas the scores of registrars and GPs did not differ; the student scores were significantly less. Only 32of registrars and 18of GPs attained scores of 70or more. 96considered training to be inadequate. Interest in wound care was only mild to moderate; with more GPs than registrars requesting literature. Conclusions. Very little; if any; training on chronic wounds is offered in South Africa. The levels of knowledge cannot be considered adequate for successful treatment; nor for teaching to undergraduates. This preliminary study cannot reflect the attitudes and knowledge throughout the country. However; it is clear that there is a need for improved education about these conditions that have huge clinical and economic consequences


Sujet(s)
Études transversales , Médecins généralistes , Savoir , Soins aux patients , République d'Afrique du Sud , Étudiant médecine , Plaies et blessures
12.
Afr. j. health prof. educ ; 2(2): 9-13, 2010. ilus
Article de Anglais | AIM (Afrique) | ID: biblio-1256907

RÉSUMÉ

Chronic wounds afflict millions worldwide; incurring significant health care costs and chronic suffering. Clinicians are often unsure about treatment; resulting in poor outcomes. Objective. To determine the scope of knowledge possessed by fifth-year medical students; general practitioners (GPs) and surgical registrars; concerning chronic wound management. Design. Cross-sectional study.Methods. Deans of eight South African medical schools received letters requesting information regarding time devoted to wound-care training. Knowledge-based questionnaires were distributed to final-year students at two universities; surgical registrars at four universities and GPs attending refresher courses. Results. Four medical schools replied; of whom only two offered formal teaching. 162 medical students; 45 GPs and 47 surgical registrars completed questionnaires. The overall median (25th - 75th percentiles) knowledge scores for registrars; GPs and students were 65(55 - 70); 55(45 - 65) and 45(35 - 50) respectively. Whereas the scores of registrars and GPs did not differ; the student scores were significantly less. Only 32of registrars and 18of GPs attained scores of 70or more. 96considered training to be inadequate. Interest in wound care was only mild to moderate; with more GPs than registrars requesting literature. Conclusions. Very little; if any; training on chronic wounds is offered in South Africa. The levels of knowledge cannot be considered adequate for successful treatment; nor for teaching to undergraduates. This preliminary study cannot reflect the attitudes and knowledge throughout the country. However; it is clear that there is a need for improved education about these conditions that have huge clinical and economic consequences


Sujet(s)
Médecins généralistes , Connaissances, attitudes et pratiques en santé , République d'Afrique du Sud , Plaies et blessures/complications , Plaies et blessures/enseignement et éducation , Plaies et blessures/étiologie
SÉLECTION CITATIONS
DÉTAIL DE RECHERCHE