The views of key leaders in South Africa on implementation of family medicine : critical role in the district health system
Date
2014-06
Authors
Moosa, Shabir
Mash, Bob
Derese, Anselme
Peersman, Wim
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BioMed Central
Abstract
Background: Integrated team-based primary care is an international imperative. This is required more so in Africa, where fragmented verticalised care dominates. South Africa is trying to address this with health reforms, including Primary Health Care Re-engineering. Family physicians are already contributing to primary care despite family medicine being only fully registered as a full specialty in South Africa in 2008. However the views of leaders on family medicine and the role of family physicians is not clear, especially with recent health reforms. The aim of this study was to understand the views of key government and academic leaders in South Africa on family medicine, roles of family physicians and human resource issues.
Methods
This was a qualitative study with academic and government leaders across South Africa. In-depth interviews were conducted with sixteen purposively selected leaders using an interview guide. Thematic content analysis was based on the framework method.
Results
Whilst family physicians were seen as critical to the district health system there was ambivalence on their leadership role and ‘specialist’ status. National health reforms were creating both threats and opportunities for family medicine. Three key roles for family physicians emerged: supporting referrals; clinical governance/quality improvement; and providing support to community-oriented care. Respondents’ urged family physicians to consolidate the development and training of family physicians, and shape human resource policy to include family physicians.
Conclusions
Family physicians were seen as critical to the district health system in South Africa despite difficulties around their precise role. Whilst their role was dominated by filling gaps at district hospitals to reduce referrals it extended to clinical governance and developing community-oriented primary care - a tall order, requiring strong teamwork. Innovative team-based service delivery is possible despite human resource challenges, but requires family physicians to proactively develop team-based models of care, reform education and advocate for clearer policy, based on the views of these respondents.
Description
CITATION: Moosa, S., Mash, B., Derese, A. & Peersman, W. 2014. The views of key leaders in South Africa on implementation of family medicine: critical role in the district health system. BMC Family Practice, 15(1):125, doi:10.1186/1471-2296-15-125.
The original publication is available at http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/15/125
The original publication is available at http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/15/125
Keywords
Family medicine -- South Africa, Physicians (General practice -- South Africa, Community health services -- South Africa, Primary health care -- South Africa
Citation
Moosa, S., Mash, B., Derese, A. & Peersman, W. 2014. The views of key leaders in South Africa on implementation of family medicine: critical role in the district health system. BMC Family Practice, 15(1):125, doi:10.1186/1471-2296-15-125.