Anton Breinl Research Centre of Health Systems Strengthening, College of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University, Douglas, QLD, Australia.
Ateneo de Zamboanga University School of Medicine, Zamboanga City, Philippines.
Front Public Health. 2020 Oct 19;8:582464. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.582464. eCollection 2020.
Equity in health outcomes for rural and remote populations in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is limited by a range of socio-economic, cultural and environmental determinants of health. Health professional education that is sensitive to local population needs and that attends to all elements of the rural pathway is vital to increase the proportion of the health workforce that practices in underserved rural and remote areas. The Training for Health Equity Network (THEnet) is a community-of-practice of 13 health professional education institutions with a focus on delivering socially accountable education to produce a fit-for-purpose health workforce. The THEnet Graduate Outcome Study is an international prospective cohort study with more than 6,000 learners from nine health professional schools in seven countries (including four LMICs; the Philippines, Sudan, South Africa and Nepal). Surveys of learners are administered at entry to and exit from medical school, and at years 1, 4, 7, and 10 thereafter. The association of learners' intention to practice in rural and other underserved areas, and a range of individual and institutional level variables at two time points-entry to and exit from the medical program, are examined and compared between country income settings. These findings are then triangulated with a sociocultural exploration of the structural relationships between educational and health service delivery ministries in each setting, status of postgraduate training for primary care, and current policy settings. This analysis confirmed the association of rural background with intention to practice in rural areas at both entry and exit. Intention to work abroad was greater for learners at entry, with a significant shift to an intention to work in-country for learners with entry and exit data. Learners at exit were more likely to intend a career in generalist disciplines than those at entry however lack of health policy and unclear career pathways limits the effectiveness of educational strategies in LMICs. This multi-national study of learners from medical schools with a social accountability mandate confirms that it is possible to produce a health workforce with a strong intent to practice in rural areas through attention to all aspects of the rural pathway.
卫生公平是指在低中等收入国家(LMICs)中,农村和偏远地区人群的健康结果公平。卫生专业教育应该关注当地人口的需求,并涵盖农村卫生服务路径的各个方面,这对于增加在服务不足的农村和偏远地区工作的卫生工作者比例至关重要。卫生公平培训网络(THEnet)是一个由 13 个卫生专业教育机构组成的实践社区,专注于提供对社会负责的教育,以培养适合目的的卫生工作者。THEnet 毕业生结果研究是一项国际前瞻性队列研究,来自七个国家的 9 所卫生专业学校的 6000 多名学习者参与了这项研究(包括四个 LMICs:菲律宾、苏丹、南非和尼泊尔)。在医学生入学时和毕业时,以及此后的第 1、4、7 和 10 年,对学习者进行调查。在两个时间点(入学和离开医学课程),对学习者在农村和其他服务不足地区执业的意愿,以及一系列个人和机构层面的变量进行了关联分析,并比较了不同国家收入水平的情况。然后,将这些发现与对每个环境中的教育和卫生服务提供部门之间的结构性关系、初级保健研究生培训的现状以及当前政策环境的社会文化探索进行三角剖分。这项分析证实了农村背景与入学和毕业时在农村地区执业的意愿之间的关联。入学时,学习者的出国工作意愿较强,而有入学和毕业数据的学习者的意愿则明显转变为在国内工作。与入学时相比,毕业时的学习者更有可能打算从事通科专业,但缺乏卫生政策和不明确的职业道路限制了教育策略在 LMICs 中的有效性。这项对具有社会责任感的医学院校学习者的跨国研究证实,通过关注农村卫生服务路径的各个方面,有可能培养出一支强烈愿意在农村地区执业的卫生工作者队伍。