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Title
The Gezira Family Medicine Project (GFMP). A scientific evaluation of a Master program for family physicians in Gezira, Sudan |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1956/21932 |
Date
2019 |
Author(s)
Mohamed, Khalid Gaffer |
Abstract
<p>Background:
Family medicine based health systems are accepted worldwide as the best suitable
model to provide integrated, high quality health services. In Sub-Saharan Africa, there
is a recent movement towards implementing family medicine in health system;
consequently, high up scaling of family medicine training is targeted and is going on
like a fast track.
Sudan faces the same challenges found in other Sub-Saharan African countries
including the predominance of the tropical diseases that over-shadow the emerging
problem of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs). The Gezira Family Medicine
Project (GFMP) was established in 2010 as a collaboration project between several
local partners including the State Ministry of Health and the University of Gezira. The
project aimed to train qualified family physicians who can participate in providing
high quality, accessible, and affordable primary health care services in Gezira. A twoyear
Master curriculum was designed as an 'in-service' model of training to meet both
service provision and training's goals. A total of 207 candidates were enrolled in the
first batch of the program in 2010. The project used information and communication
technology (ICT) in a comprehensive way; it is used to provide health care in a
distance (telemedicine), to facilitate and increase the accessibility in medical education
(e-learning) and to manage patients' information (Electronic Medical Records- EMR).</p>
<p>Study objectives:
This study aimed to:
<ol>
<li>Describe the GFMP during its first batch (2010-2012), its implementation,
curriculum structure, baseline data of the trainees and their health centres.</li>
<li>Assess the candidates' utilization of information and communication technology at
the GFMP, and their perception of its use.</li>
<li>Assess the impact of the Master programme on candidates' confidence to perform
certain manual and cognitive clinical skills.</li>
<li>Assess the impact of the GFMP on candidates' adherence to the core values of
family medicine including patient-centeredness.</li>
</ol>
</p>
<p>Methods:
Three comprehensive questionnaires were used to collect data both at the start of the
Master program for the first batch and again at its end. The first questionnaire included
background data regarding the candidates and their self-assessment of confidence to
perform certain skills. The second questionnaire was a checklist for the health centres
including the buildings, available equipment and provided services. The third
questionnaire aimed to assess candidates' practice including adhesion to the core
values of family medicine during patient consultations.
A cross sectional, questionnaire and administrative data based observational design
was used in paper 1 and paper 2. Self-evaluation questionnaire was used to collect data
about the trainees' skills, while a checklist was used to collect data from the health
centres. Administrative data was used to describe the project implementation, its
curriculum design and candidates' utilization of ICT during the master period. A prospective cross sectional study with a before-and-after design was used in paper 3
and paper 4 to assess the progress change of the trainees during the Master period 2010-2012 (cohort observational design). Self-evaluation questionnaire and practicebased
data were used to assess trainees' confidence in performing certain clinical skills
and to assess their adhesion to some family medicine core values. The Patient-
Practitioner Orientation Scale (PPOS) was used to assess patient-centeredness.</p>
<p>Results:
The 2-year in-service Master program at the GFMP could recruit 207 physicians to be
trained in family medicine and to provide health services in 158 health centres, of
which, 84 centres had never been served by a doctor before. The mean age of the
enrolled trainees was 32.5 years, 57% were males and one third of them were
graduated from the University of Gezira. Self-evaluation in confidence to perform
certain clinical skills showed significant variations between individual skills, between
medical disciplines, and between genders. Health centres were generally equipped to
deal with tropical diseases, but poorly equipped to deal with Non Communicable
Diseases (NCDs)
Information and communication (ICT) reports showed a performance of 3808 online
telemedicine consultations in the period April 2011 to December 2012. Over 165000
new patients' electronic medical records (EMRs) were established by the candidates at
their graduation (N: 125 candidate). Candidates were generally highly satisfied with
the use of ICT during their master period. They highlighted some patients' concerns
regarding the use of EMR and telemedicine during consultations.
To assess candidate's improvement after the Master program, self-assessment of 46
clinical skills was done before and after the master program using a five-grade Likert
scale (1-5). It showed an overall improvement of 21.7% from 3.23 (before) to 3.92
(after). Improvement variation is observed between the different medical disciplines. Males have constantly scored higher confidence than females, while females showed
higher progress percentage in improvement compared with males. Statistically
significant improvement is also detected regarding candidates' development in certain
role skills like leadership, health promotion, and communication with colleagues and
the community. In contrast, there was an overall significant decrease in orientation
towards patient-centred care by 4% using the Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale
(PPOS).</p>
<p>Conclusion:
GFMP represented a good model for local collaboration, which resulted in performing
training goals and providing high quality primary health care services. The in-service
model of training was attractive for trainees (207 joined the program) and promising
for health service provision (158 health centres were served by GFMP, of which 84
had never been served by physicians before). Information and communication
technology (ICT) supported both training goals and service provision goals at the
GFMP. The GFMP curriculum had a positive impact on candidates' confidence to
perform the targeted clinical skills. Practice data showed a positive impact of the
Master program on candidates' adherence to family medicine core values. Patient
centred care was a weak point in candidates' training that needs more attention in
future curriculum planning and implementation.
Recent assessment of the status of the GFMP and family medicine training in Sudan as
a whole done in Apr 2018, showed still high up-scaling of family medicine training in
the whole country, presented by several institutes including the University of Gezira
and the National Public Health Institute (PHI). The development of the GFMP as a
project is affected by economical challenges and a decline in the political commitment,
which affected the partnership between the University of Gezira and the State Ministry
of Health.</p> |
Language
eng |
Publisher
The University of Bergen |
Relation
Paper I: Mohamed KG, Hunskaar S, Abdelrahman SH, Malik EM. Scaling up family medicine training in Gezira, Sudan - a 2-year in-service Master programme using modern information and communication technology: a survey study. Human Resources for Health. 2014: 12:3. The article is available at: <a href="http://hdl.handle.net/1956/8665" target="blank">http://hdl.handle.net/1956/8665</a>; Paper II: Mohamed KG, Hunskaar S, Abdelrahman SH, Malik EM. Telemedicine and E-Learning in a primary care setting in Sudan: The experience of the Gezira family medicine project. International Journal of Family Medicine. 2015:716426. The article is available in the main thesis. The article is also available at: <a href="https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/716426" target="blank">https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/716426</a>; Paper III: Mohamed KG, Hunskaar S, Abdelrahman SH, Malik EM. Confidence in procedural skills before and after a two-year master's programme in family medicine in Gezira state, Sudan. Advances in Medicine. 2017:6267015. The article is available in the main thesis. The article is also available at: <a href=" https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/6267015" target="blank"> https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/6267015</a>; Paper IV: Mohamed KG, Hunskaar S, Abdelrahman SH, Malik EM. Impact on core values of family medicine from a 2-year Master's programme in Gezira, Sudan: Observational study. BMC Family Practice. 2019: 20:145. The article is available at: <a href="http://hdl.handle.net/1956/21931" target="blank">http://hdl.handle.net/1956/21931</a> |
Type of publication
Doctoral thesis |
Rights
Attribution-Non Commercial CC BY-NC; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/; Copyright the author |
Identifier
978-82-308-3526-5; 1689698 |
Repository
Bergen - University of Bergen
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Added to C-A: 2020-04-21;11:43:34 |
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