Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, Ontario, ON, P3E 2C6, Canada.
Bull World Health Organ. 2010 Oct 1;88(10):777-82. doi: 10.2471/BLT.09.072462. Epub 2010 Aug 13.
Access to well trained and motivated health workers is the major rural health issue. Without local access, it is unlikely that people in rural and remote communities will be able to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Studies in many countries have shown that the three factors most strongly associated with entering rural practice are: (i) a rural background; (ii) positive clinical and educational experiences in rural settings as part of undergraduate medical education; and (iii) targeted training for rural practice at the postgraduate level. This paper presents evidence for policy initiatives involving the training of medical students from, in and for rural and remote areas. We give examples of medical schools in different regions of the world that are using an evidence-based and context-driven educational approach to producing skilled and motivated health workers. We demonstrate how context influences the design and implementation of different rural education programmes. Successful programmes have overcome major obstacles including negative assumptions and attitudes, and limitations of human, physical, educational and financial resources. Training rural health workers in the rural setting is likely to result in greatly improved recruitment and retention of skilled health-care providers in rural underserved areas with consequent improvement in access to health care for the local communities.
获得训练有素且积极进取的卫生工作者是农村卫生的主要问题。如果没有当地的帮助,农村和偏远社区的人民就不太可能实现千年发展目标。许多国家的研究表明,与进入农村实践最密切相关的三个因素是:(i)农村背景;(ii)本科医学教育中在农村环境中的积极临床和教育经验;以及(iii)研究生阶段针对农村实践的定向培训。本文提出了涉及培训来自农村和偏远地区的医学生的政策举措的证据。我们给出了来自世界不同地区的医学院校的例子,这些医学院校正在使用基于证据和背景驱动的教育方法来培养有技能和积极性的卫生工作者。我们展示了背景如何影响不同农村教育计划的设计和实施。成功的计划克服了包括负面假设和态度以及人力、物力、教育和财力资源有限在内的重大障碍。在农村环境中培训农村卫生工作者,很可能会极大地改善农村服务不足地区熟练医疗保健提供者的招聘和留用,从而改善当地社区获得医疗保健的机会。