Abstract

The South African Pharmacy Council (SAPC) regulates undergraduate pharmacy education and pharmacy practice. The SAPC Good Pharmacy Practice manual describes the role of pharmacists in maternal and child health (MCH) in line with the recommendation of international health regulatory bodies. However, baseline study findings in 2017 supported literature from around the world that indicated a need for curriculum review and integration to address the knowledge and skills gap in pharmacists’ MCH training. This paper describes the development and implementation of an integrated framework for MCH training across the four years of a Bachelor of Pharmacy program. The intervention included didactic lectures, skills practical on infant growth assessment, and an experiential learning component at primary health care clinics and pharmacies. Knowledge and skills assessment on contraception, maternal and antenatal care, and neonatal and child care were carried out pre, eight weeks post, and two years post intervention using the same questionnaire. ANOVA and post hoc analyses showed that participants’ knowledge and skills increased post intervention but decreased significantly two years later except in contraception where students experienced longitudinal integration of the MCH component. Generally, participants performed above the university average except in maternal and antenatal care.

Highlights

  • The delivery of maternal and child health (MCH) services in South Africa is undertaken at the primary health care (PHC) level [1]

  • Ten (21%) of the second-year participants had some knowledge of MCH prior to their exposure to the school’s curriculum content through work-based experiences, information from parents or workshops or personal experiences

  • The literature collected at the time of the publication of this work showed that most studies of this nature in Pharm D or Bachelor of Pharmacy programs focused on assessing either knowledge, perception, or curriculum content of single components of MCH, such as contraception [27,28,29,30], preconception care [31], immunization [32,33,34], pregnancy and breastfeeding [35,36], and pharmaceutical care for pediatrics [37] which is consistent with the traditional fragmented approach to teaching MCH

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The delivery of maternal and child health (MCH) services in South Africa is undertaken at the primary health care (PHC) level [1]. As one of the quadruple burdens of disease in the country, the high maternal (121 per 100,000 in 2015) and under-five mortality (42 per 1000 live births in 2016) ratios require that all health care professionals who participate in MCH care delivery are effectively trained to deliver the required health care services to this group of patients [2,3]. The delivery of care cuts across the continuum of MCH care and is in line with World Health Organization’s (WHO) suggested interventions to low- and middle-income countries with high burdens of mortality [7]. Environmental and nutritional health (diarrhoeal disease, de-worming, Vitamin A supplementation, pregnancy supplements) (3 h)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call