Abstract

With South Africa's tumultuous history and resulting burden of disease and disability persisting post-democracy in 1994, a proposed decentralization of heath care with an urgent focus on disease prevention strategies ensued in 2010. Subsequently a nationwide call by students to adapt teaching and learning to an African context spoke to the need for responsive health professions training. Institutions of higher education are therefore encouraged to commit to person-centered comprehensive primary health care (PHC) education which equates to distributed training along the continuum of care. To cope with the complexity of patient care and health care systems, interprofessional education and collaborative practice has been recommended in undergraduate clinical training. Stellenbosch University, South Africa, introduced interprofessional home visits as part of the students' contextual PHC exposure in a rural community in 2012. This interprofessional approach to patient assessment and management in an under-resourced setting challenges students to collaboratively find local solutions to the complex problems identified. This paper reports on an explorative pilot study investigating students' and graduates' perceived value of their interprofessional home visit exposure in preparing them for working in South Africa. Qualitative semi-structured individual and focus group interviews with students and graduates from five different health sciences programmes were conducted. Primary and secondary data sources were analyzed using an inductive approach. Thematic analysis was conducted independently by two researchers and revealed insights into effective patient management requiring an interprofessional team approach. Understanding social determinants of health, other professions' roles, as well as scope and limitations of practice in a resource constrained environment can act as a precursor for collaborative patient care. The continuity of an interprofessional approach to patient care after graduation was perceived to be largely dependent on relationships and professional hierarchy in the workplace. Issues of hierarchy, which are often systemic, affect a sense of professional value, efficacy in patient management and job satisfaction. Limitations to using secondary data for analysis are discussed, noting the need for a larger more comprehensive study. Recommendations for rural training pathways include interprofessional teamwork and health care worker advocacy to facilitate collaborative care in practice.

Highlights

  • International studies indicate that effective primary health care (PHC) requires the devolution of hospital-based care into the community, and should include interprofessional collaboration of health professionals to improve patient outcomes [1]

  • This would imply that health care workers should be able to work in interprofessional teams, and in collaboration with the community they serve

  • This study explored the perceptions of participating undergraduates in the Collaborative Care Project (CCP) and again as graduates regarding the relevance of Interprofessional education (IPE) in preparing them for work in South Africa

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Summary

Introduction

International studies indicate that effective primary health care (PHC) requires the devolution of hospital-based care into the community, and should include interprofessional collaboration of health professionals to improve patient outcomes [1]. In 2012, Stellenbosch University (SU) Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences opened the country’s first Rural Clinical School (RCS) campus in Worcester, a town of about 100,000 people situated in the Western Cape Province. This was a timeous response to the need for a national change in the approach to health care service delivery and education [2]. The overarching intention of the RCS is to support rural training pathways by providing longitudinal rural exposure and clinical training for undergraduate students focused on social impact and community engagement This is achieved using hands-on experience of the health issues facing rural, under-served and resource-limited communities in South Africa. Final year undergraduate Medicine, Occupational Therapy, Human Nutrition, Physiotherapy, and Speech-Language and Hearing Therapy students spend between 6 weeks and 10 months at the RCS, depending on the programme

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