Rick Tara J, Moshi Doreen D
Tara J. Rick is an adjunct professor in the PA program at St. Catherine University in St. Paul, Minn., practices hematology and oncology at the University of Minnesota Health in Minneapolis, and is a researcher at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Doreen D. Moshi practices at Nduruma Health Center in the Arusha region of Tanzania. The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.
JAAPA. 2018 Apr;31(4):43-47. doi: 10.1097/01.JAA.0000531051.04879.59.
Tanzania, in East Africa, has one of the lowest numbers of physician per population in the world, especially in rural areas where most people live. To address this shortage, assistant medical officers (AMOs) were developed in the 1960s. AMOs are trained in an abbreviated medical school program, work independently, remain the highest-trained practitioners in rural practice, and provide most emergency surgical obstetric care in nonurban settings. Although information on AMOs is limited, no evidence has emerged that their patient care outcomes differ from physicians. These healthcare professionals, similar to physician assistants, have expanded access to care in severely underserved areas of the country. With a growing demand for contemporary healthcare and stretched service delivery, more research is needed on the ameliorating effect AMOs have on Tanzanian healthcare, especially as the country considers converting AMO training programs to medical school programs.
位于东非的坦桑尼亚是世界上人均医生数量最少的国家之一,在大多数人口居住的农村地区尤为如此。为了解决这一短缺问题,20世纪60年代设立了助理医务人员(AMO)这一职位。助理医务人员接受的是精简版医学院课程培训,独立工作,仍然是农村地区训练有素的最高级从业者,并在非城市地区提供大部分急诊外科产科护理。尽管关于助理医务人员的信息有限,但没有证据表明他们的患者护理结果与医生不同。这些医疗保健专业人员与医师助理类似,扩大了该国严重服务不足地区的医疗服务可及性。随着对现代医疗保健的需求不断增长以及服务提供紧张,需要更多关于助理医务人员对坦桑尼亚医疗保健改善作用的研究,特别是在该国考虑将助理医务人员培训计划转变为医学院课程之际。