Abstract

Quality service delivery in primary care requires motivated and competent health professionals. In the Kenyan private sector, GPs with no postgraduate training in family medicine offer primary care. There is a paucity of evidence on the ability of primary care providers to deliver comprehensive care and no such evidence is available for GPs practising in the private sector in Kenya. To evaluate GPs' training and experience in the skills required for comprehensive primary care. A cross-sectional descriptive survey in 13 primary care clinics in the private sector of Nairobi, Kenya. A questionnaire, originally designed for a national survey of primary care doctors in South Africa, was adapted. The study collected self-reported data on performance of clinical skills by 25 GPs. Data were analysed using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS, version 25). GPs were mostly aged <40 years, with ≤10 years of experience, and there was an equal sex distribution. GPs reported moderate performance with adult health, communication and consultation, and clinical administration; and weak performance with emergencies, child health, surgery, ear, nose, and throat (ENT) and eyes, women's health, and orthopaedics. The GPs lacked training in specific skills such as proctoscopies, contraceptive devices, skin procedures, intra-articular injections, red reflex tests, and use of genograms. GPs lacked training and performed poorly in some of the essential skills required in primary care. Continuing professional development, training in family medicine, broadening the model of care, and deployment of family physicians to the clinics could improve care comprehensiveness.

Highlights

  • The signing of the Astana Declaration reaffirmed the commitment of the World Health Organization (WHO) and member states to “prioritise, promote and protect people’s health and well-being and provide health services that are of high quality, safe, comprehensive, integrated, accessible, available and affordable for all”.1,2 To achieve such goals, health systems have to be built on the foundation of primary health care (PHC).[3,4] Primary health care has been defined as having three key levers, namely, primary care, multi-sectoral action and community empowerment.[5]

  • There is a paucity of evidence on the ability of primary care providers to deliver comprehensive care and no such evidence is available for general practitioners (GP) practising in the private sector in Kenya

  • General practitioners lacked training and performed poorly in some of the essential skills required in primary care

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Summary

Introduction

The signing of the Astana Declaration reaffirmed the commitment of the World Health Organization (WHO) and member states to “prioritise, promote and protect people’s health and well-being and provide health services that are of high quality, safe, comprehensive, integrated, accessible, available and affordable for all”.1,2 To achieve such goals, health systems have to be built on the foundation of primary health care (PHC).[3,4] Primary health care has been defined as having three key levers, namely, primary care, multi-sectoral action and community empowerment.[5]. The signing of the Astana Declaration reaffirmed the commitment of the World Health Organization (WHO) and member states to “prioritise, promote and protect people’s health and well-being and provide health services that are of high quality, safe, comprehensive, integrated, accessible, available and affordable for all”.1,2. To achieve such goals, health systems have to be built on the foundation of primary health care (PHC).[3,4]. In the Kenyan private sector, general practitioners (GP), with no postgraduate training in family medicine, offer primary care.

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