15 results
Search Results
2. Rehabilitation and primary care treatment guidelines, South Africa.
- Author
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Conradie, Thandi, Charumbira, Maria, Bezuidenhout, Maryke, Leong, Trudy, and Louw, Quinette
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH policy , *CHRONIC diseases , *PRIMARY health care , *MEDICAL protocols , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *HEALTH insurance , *MEDICAL referrals , *REHABILITATION , *INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
The World Health Organization recognizes rehabilitation as an essential component of universal health coverage (UHC). In many countries, UHC builds on a standard benefits package of services that is informed by the country's essential medicines list, standard treatment guidelines and primary health care essential laboratory list. In South Africa, primary health care is largely provided and managed by primary health-care nurses and medical officers in accordance with primary health care standard treatment guidelines. However, rehabilitation is mostly excluded from these guidelines. This paper describes the 10-year process that led to rehabilitation referral recommendations being considered for inclusion in South Africa's primary health care standard treatment guidelines. There were five key events: (i) a breakthrough moment; (ii) producing a scientific evidence synthesis and formulating recommendations; (iii) presenting recommendations to the national essential medicines list committee; (iv) mapping rehabilitation recommendations onto relevant treatment guideline sections; and (v) submitting revised recommendations to the committee for final consideration. The main lesson learnt is that, by working together, rehabilitation professionals can be of sufficient number to make a difference, improve service delivery and increase referrals to rehabilitation from primary health care. A remaining challenge is the lack of a rehabilitation representative on the national essential medicines list committee, which could hamper understanding of rehabilitation and of the complexities of the supporting evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Hearing care across the life course provided in the community.
- Author
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Suen, Jonathan J., Bhatnagar, Kaustubh, Emmett, Susan D., Marrone, Nicole, Kleindienst Robler, Samantha, Swanepoel, De Wet, Wong, Aileen, and Nieman, Carrie L.
- Subjects
- *
TREATMENT of hearing disorders , *AUDIOMETRY , *CHILDREN'S health , *COST effectiveness , *HUMAN life cycle , *MEDICAL practice , *SOCIAL support , *TASK performance , *CLINICAL supervision , *EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Untreated hearing loss is recognized as a growing global health priority because of its prevalence and harmful effects on health and well-being. Until recently, little progress had been made in expanding hearing care beyond traditional clinic-based models to incorporate public health approaches that increase accessibility to and affordability of hearing care. As demonstrated in numerous countries and for many health conditions, sharing health-care tasks with community health workers (CHWs) offers advantages as a complementary approach to expand health-service delivery and improve public health. This paper explores the possibilities of task shifting to provide hearing care across the life course by reviewing several ongoing projects in a variety of settings -- Bangladesh, India, South Africa and the United States of America. The selected programmes train CHWs to provide a range of hearing-care services, from childhood hearing screening to management of age-related hearing loss. We discuss lessons learnt from these examples to inform best practices for task shifting within community-delivered hearing care. Preliminary evidence supports the feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness of hearing care delivered by CHWs in these varied settings. To make further progress, community-delivered hearing care must build on established models of CHWs and ensure adequate training and supervision, delineation of the scope of practice, supportive local and national legislation, incorporation of appropriate technology and analysis of programme costs and cost--effectiveness. In view of the growing evidence, community-delivered hearing care may now be a way forward to improve hearing health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. BRICS: opportunities to improve road safety.
- Author
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Hyder, Adnan A. and Vecino-Ortiz, Andres I.
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TRAFFIC safety , *WORLD health , *WOUNDS & injuries , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,TRAFFIC accident risk factors - Abstract
Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China and South Africa -- the countries known as BRICS -- are currently undergoing a deep epidemiological transition that is mainly driven by rapid economic growth and technological change. The changes being observed in the distribution of the burden of diseases and injuries -- such as recent increases in the incidence of road traffic injuries -- are matters of concern. BRICS may need stronger institutional capacity to address such changes in a timely way. In this paper, we present data on road traffic injuries in BRICS and illustrate the enormous challenge that these countries currently face in reducing the incidence of such injuries. There is an urgent need to improve road safety indicators in every country constituting BRICS. It is imperative for BRICS to invest in system-wide road safety interventions and reduce the mortality and morbidity from road traffic injuries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Early implementation of WHO recommendations for the retention of health workers in remote and rural areas.
- Author
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Buchan, James, Couper, Ian D., Viroj Tangcharoensathien, Khampasong Thepannya, Jaskiewicz, Wanda, Perfilieva, Galina, and Dolea, Carmen
- Subjects
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EMPLOYEE recruitment , *LEADERSHIP , *MEDICAL personnel , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *RURAL conditions , *EMPLOYEE retention , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
The maldistribution of health workers between urban and rural areas is a policy concern in virtually all countries. It prevents equitable access to health services, can contribute to increased health-care costs and underutilization of health professional skills in urban areas, and is a barrier to universal health coverage. To address this long-standing concern, the World Health Organization (WHO) has issued global recommendations to improve the rural recruitment and retention of the health workforce. This paper presents experiences with local and regional adaptation and adoption of WHO recommendations. It highlights challenges and lessons learnt in implementation in two countries -- the Lao People's Democratic Republic and South Africa - and provides a broader perspective in two regions -- Asia and Europe. At country level, the use of the recommendations facilitated a more structured and focused policy dialogue, which resulted in the development and adoption of more relevant and evidence-based policies. At regional level, the recommendations sparked a more sustained effort for cross-country policy assessment and joint learning. There is a need for impact assessment and evaluation that focus on the links between the rural availability of health workers and universal health coverage. The effects of any health-financing reforms on incentive structures for health workers will also have to be assessed if the central role of more equitably distributed health workers in achieving universal health coverage is to be supported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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6. Maternal and congenital syphilis programmes: case studies in Bolivia,Kenya and South Africa.
- Author
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Deperthes, Bidia D., Meheus, André, O'Reilly, Kevin, and Broutet, Nathalie
- Subjects
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CONGENITAL, hereditary, & infantile syphilis , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *PRENATAL care , *MATERNAL health services - Abstract
Preventing congenital syphilis is not technically difficult however operational difficulties limit the effectiveness of programs in many settings. This paper reports on programs in Bolivia, Kenya, and South Africa. All three countries have established antenatal syphilis control programs. Early antenatal syphilis screening and management of positive cases were difficult to implement since most women presented for their first antenatal clinic visit after 6 months of pregnancy. Most women had rapid plasma reagin (RPR) testing; results were available on the same day in some clinics but took up to 4 weeks in others. No clinic had a system for tracking RPR-reactive women who did not return for their results. There were no guidelines for providers in Kenya and Bolivia. In all countries, supplies, drugs, notification cards, and other consumables were often unavailable. Health-care providers were unmotivated in Kenya and reported an excessive client load. In South Africa and Kenya some clients reported at their exit interview that they had never heard of syphilis nor had they been informed why blood was collected. Several prevention strategies could be implemented at the clinic level. These include encouraging women to attend for antenatal care before the fourth month of pregnancy, providing point- of-care testing so that results are available immediately and women who test positive can be treated, implementing presumptive treatment of sexual partners of women who test positive, adding a second test later in pregnancy so that incident cases can be managed, and improving the quality of syphilis care during pregnancy, delivery, and the neonatal period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
7. Evidence to support a food-based dietary guideline on sugar consumption in South Africa.
- Author
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Steyn, N.P., Myburgh, N.G., and Nel, J.H.
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DIET , *GUIDELINES , *NUTRITION , *ETHNIC groups - Abstract
Since 1997, South Africa has been developing and implementing food-based dietary guidelines for people aged ≥6 years. The complexity of the population, which contains different ethnic groups, as well as the rapid urbanization that is taking place, means that food-based dietary guidelines need to consider both overnutrition and undernutrition. The initial guidelines did not include guidance on sugar, and the Department of Health was not prepared to approve them until appropriate guidance on sugar was included. This paper summarizes the evidence available for such a guideline and the nature of that evidence. Other low-and middle-income countries, particularly those in Africa, may face a similar dilemma and might learn from our experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
8. Globalization and occupational health: a perspective from southern Africa.
- Author
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Loewenson, Rene
- Subjects
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GLOBALIZATION , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene - Abstract
Abstract Increased world trade has generally benefited industrialized or strong economies and marginalized those that are weak. This paper examines the impact of globalization on employment trends and occupational health, drawing on examples from southern Africa. While the share of world trade to the world's poorest countries has decreased, workers in these countries increasingly find themselves in insecure, poor-quality jobs, sometimes involving technologies which are obsolete or banned in industrialized countries. The occupational illness which results is generally less visible and not adequately recognized as a problem in low-income countries. Those outside the workplace can also be affected through, for example, work-related environmental pollution and poor living conditions. In order to reduce the adverse effects of global trade reforms on occupational health, stronger social protection measures must be built into production and trade activities, including improved recognition, prevention, and management of work-related ill-health. Furthermore, the success of production and trade systems should be judged on how well they satisfy both economic growth and population health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
9. Pioneering community-oriented primary care.
- Author
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Susser M
- Subjects
- Community Health Centers history, History, 20th Century, Humans, South Africa, Community Health Services history, Rural Health Services history
- Published
- 1999
10. Integrating reproductive health: myth and ideology.
- Author
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Lush L, Cleland J, Walt G, and Mayhew S
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Family Planning Services, Female, Ghana, Humans, Kenya, Poverty, South Africa, Women's Health, Zambia, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated, HIV Infections prevention & control, Primary Health Care, Reproductive Medicine, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control
- Abstract
Since 1994, integrating human immunodeficiency virus/sexually transmitted disease (HIV/STD) services with primary health care, as part of reproductive health, has been advocated to address two major public health problems: to control the spread of HIV; and to improve women's reproductive health. However, integration is unlikely to succeed because primary health care and the political context within which this approach is taking place are unsuited to the task. In this paper, a historical comparison is made between the health systems of Ghana, Kenya and Zambia and that of South Africa, to examine progress on integration of HIV/STD services since 1994. Our findings indicate that primary health care in Ghana, Kenya and Zambia has been used mainly by women and children and that integration has meant adding new activities to these services. For the vertical programmes which support these services, integration implies enhanced collaboration rather than merged responsibility. This compromise between comprehensive rhetoric and selective reality has resulted in little change to existing structures and processes; problems with integration have been exacerbated by the activities of external donors. By comparison, in South Africa integration has been achieved through political commitment to primary health care rather than expanding vertical programmes (top-down management systems). The rhetoric of integration has been widely used in reproductive health despite lack of evidence for its feasibility, as a result of the convergence of four agendas: improving family planning quality; the need to improve women's health; the rapid spread of HIV; and conceptual shifts in primary health care. International reproductive health actors, however, have taken little account of political, financial and managerial constraints to implementation in low-income countries.
- Published
- 1999
11. An mRNA technology transfer programme and economic sustainability in health care.
- Author
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Dutt D, Mazzucato M, and Torreele E
- Subjects
- Humans, World Health Organization, COVID-19 Vaccines economics, RNA, Messenger genetics, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, South Africa, Global Health, Technology Transfer, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) set up the messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) technology transfer programme in June 2021 with a development hub in South Africa and 15 partner vaccine producers in middle-income countries. The goal was to support the sustainable development of and access to life-saving vaccines for people in these countries as a means to enhance epidemic preparedness and global public health. This initiative aims to build resilience and strengthen local vaccine research, and development and manufacturing capacity in different regions of the world, especially those areas that could not access coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines in a timely way. This paper outlines the current global vaccine market and summarizes the findings of a case study on the mRNA technology transfer programme conducted from November 2022 to May 2023. The study was guided by the vision of the WHO Council on the Economics of Health for All to build an economy for health using its four work streams of value, finance, innovation and capacity. Based on the findings of the study, we offer a mission-oriented policy framework to support the mRNA technology transfer programme as a pilot for transformative change towards an ecosystem for health innovation for the common good. Parts of this vision have already been incorporated into the governance of the mRNA technology transfer programme, while other aspects, especially the common good approach, still need to be applied to achieve the goals of the programme., ((c) 2024 The authors; licensee World Health Organization.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Evaluating large-scale health programmes at a district level in resource-limited countries.
- Author
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Svoronos T and Mate KS
- Subjects
- Geography, Global Health, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, Health Services Research methods, Humans, Income, Program Development, Public Health methods, Retrospective Studies, Social Marketing, Socioeconomic Factors, South Africa, Developing Countries statistics & numerical data, Health Promotion methods, Poverty statistics & numerical data, Program Evaluation
- Abstract
Recent experience in evaluating large-scale global health programmes has highlighted the need to consider contextual differences between sites implementing the same intervention. Traditional randomized controlled trials are ill-suited for this purpose, as they are designed to identify whether an intervention works, not how, when and why it works. In this paper we review several evaluation designs that attempt to account for contextual factors that contribute to intervention effectiveness. Using these designs as a base, we propose a set of principles that may help to capture information on context. Finally, we propose a tool, called a driver diagram, traditionally used in implementation that would allow evaluators to systematically monitor changing dynamics in project implementation and identify contextual variation across sites. We describe an implementation-related example from South Africa to underline the strengths of the tool. If used across multiple sites and multiple projects, the resulting driver diagrams could be pooled together to form a generalized theory for how, when and why a widely-used intervention works. Mechanisms similar to the driver diagram are urgently needed to complement existing evaluations of large-scale implementation efforts.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Implications of the new WHO guidelines on HIV and infant feeding for child survival in South Africa.
- Author
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Doherty T, Sanders D, Goga A, and Jackson D
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Female, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious drug therapy, South Africa, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Bottle Feeding, Breast Feeding, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections prevention & control, World Health Organization
- Abstract
The World Health Organization released revised principles and recommendations for HIV and infant feeding in November 2009. The recommendations are based on programmatic evidence and research studies that have accumulated over the past few years within African countries. This document urges national or subnational health authorities to decide whether health services should mainly counsel and support HIV-infected mothers to breastfeed and receive antiretroviral interventions, or to avoid all breastfeeding, based on estimations of which strategy is likely to give infants in those communities the greatest chance of HIV-free survival. South Africa has recently revised its clinical guidelines for prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission, adopting many of the recommendations in the November 2009 World Health Organization's rapid advice on use of antiretroviral drugs for treating pregnant women and preventing HIV infection in infants. However, one aspect of the new South African guidelines gives cause for concern: the continued provision of free formula milk to HIV-infected women through public health facilities. This paper presents the latest evidence regarding mortality and morbidity associated with feeding practices in the context of HIV and suggests a modification of current policy to prioritize child survival for all South African children.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The determinants of self-reported health-related quality of life in a culturally and socially diverse South African community.
- Author
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Jelsma J and Ferguson G
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Regression Analysis, Self Disclosure, South Africa epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Cultural Diversity, Health Status Indicators, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objective: To determine factors predictive of the score on the visual analogue scale (VAS) of the EQ-5D questionnaire., Methods: The responses of 1159 residents of a socially and ethnically diverse suburb of Cape Town, South Africa, to the EQ-5D questionnaire were analysed using forward stepwise multiple regression. The variables entered included ethnic group, religious affiliation (Christian or Muslim), income level, unemployment, recent illness or disability and each level of the five EQ-5D domains., Findings: The model developed accounted for an adjusted r(2) of 0.234 and included 11 variables. In addition to the EQ-5D domains, the presence of a disability, an income of less than 420 US dollars per month, unemployment and age in years were significant predictors of VAS score., Conclusion: The substantial contribution of health state to the VAS indicates that it is a valid measure of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) across population groups. However, the subjects with lower social status reported a worse HRQoL than their health state alone warranted and this variable might need to be taken into account if the VAS is to be used to compare health states across populations. This paper provides empirical evidence of how HRQoL is perceived by different socioeconomic, cultural, ethnic and religious communities within a developing country.
- Published
- 2004
15. Patient advocacy and arthritis: moving forward.
- Author
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Leong AL and Euller-Ziegler L
- Subjects
- Australia, Education, Medical, Europe, Humans, New Zealand, North America, Patient Education as Topic, Personal Autonomy, Program Development, Self Care, South Africa, Arthritis therapy, Patient Advocacy trends, Patient Participation, Patient-Centered Care trends
- Abstract
Patient advocacy is based on the premise that people have the right to make their own choices about their health care. Personal advocacy is centred on the experiential expertise of the individual affected by the condition, whereas group advocacy is grounded on patient-centred strategies and actions. The first patient advocacy groups for arthritis were set up over 20 years ago in the USA and have subsequently spread to many other countries. This paper discusses the growth and impact of personal advocacy as well as recent developments in group advocacy in the Asia-Pacific region, Europe, and North America, in terms of arthritis awareness, research, corporate partnerships, and the Bone and Joint Decade global initiative.
- Published
- 2004
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