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Title
Family Medicine in Ethiopia: Lessons from a Global Collaboration |
Full text
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/41s1n8pq; https://escholarship.org/content/qt41s1n8pq/qt41s1n8pq.pdf |
Date
2017 |
Author(s)
Evensen, Ann; Wondimagegn, Dawit; Zemenfes Ashebir, Daniel; Rouleau, Katherine; Haq, Cynthia; Ghavam-Rassoul, Abbas; Janakiram, Praseedha; Kvach, Elizabeth; Busse, Heidi; Conniff, James; Cornelson, Brian |
Abstract
BackgroundBuilding the capacity of local health systems to provide high-quality, self-sustaining medical education and health care is the central purpose for many global health partnerships (GHPs). Since 2001, our global partner consortium collaborated to establish Family Medicine in Ethiopia; the first Ethiopian family physicians graduated in February 2016.MethodsThe authors, representing the primary Ethiopian, Canadian, and American partners in the GHP, identified obstacles, accomplishments, opportunities, errors, and observations from the years preceding residency launch and the first 3 years of the residency.ResultsCommon themes were identified through personal reflection and presented as lessons to guide future GHPs. LESSON 1: Promote Family Medicine as a distinct specialty. LESSON 2: Avoid gaps, conflict, and redundancy in partner priorities and activities. LESSON 3: Building relationships takes time and shared experiences. LESSON 4: Communicate frequently to create opportunities for success. LESSON 5: Engage local leaders to build sustainable, long-lasting programs from the beginning of the partnership.ConclusionsGHPs can benefit individual participants, their organizations, and their communities served. Engaging with numerous partners may also result in challenges-conflicting expectations, misinterpretations, and duplication or gaps in efforts. The lessons discussed in this article may be used to inform GHP planning and interactions to maximize benefits and minimize mishaps. |
Subject(s)
Health Services and Systems; Health Sciences; Canada; Delivery of Health Care; Ethiopia; Family Practice; Humans; International Cooperation; Internship and Residency; Physicians; Family; United States; Family Physicians; Global Health; Program Evaluation; Public Health and Health Services; General & Internal Medicine; Health services and systems |
Coverage
670 - 677 |
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California |
Type of publication
article |
Format
application/pdf |
Source
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine, vol 30, iss 5 |
Rights
CC-BY |
Identifier
qt41s1n8pq; info:doi/10.3122/jabfm.2017.05.170086 |
Repository
Berkeley - University of California
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Added to C-A: 2024-08-20;15:27:10 |
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