Framing professional programs within development projects: driving longer term recognition and integration
TL;DR: Health professions are regulated in order to ensure patient safety, as well as minimum standards of care and training within professions, so that graduate qualifications are legitimised and the longer term objectives of the development investment are supported.
read more
Abstract: Optometry has, over the past ten years, emerged as a profession strategically positioned to address the burden of uncorrected refractive error in developing countries. Estimates suggest that 285 million people in the world are needlessly visually impaired, mainly due to the lack of trained eye health professionals in the developing world. Development initiatives in eye care have therefore moved away from vertical, service delivery approaches to supporting the establishment of more sustainable, locally owned training programs. This research is based on one the evaluation of one such initiative known as the Mozambique Eyecare Project. This study followed a qualitative research design. Ethical approval was granted by the Research Ethics Committee at the Dublin Institute of Technology, which followed the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki. A qualitative, interview-based study was undertaken between 2012 and 2014 with eighteen key informants involved in the design, planning and implementation of the project. A semi-structured interview guide was developed to explore, inter alia, challenges relating to the establishment of the new profession of optometry in Mozambique. Data was coded and analysed thematically and results derived from a process of descriptive-interpretive analysis. The establishment of a new profession within the ambit of a development project presents several challenges, principally the establishment of the profession's identity in relation to similar professional cadres' in-country. The risk of not addressing professional regulatory requirements for new programs, where equal or similar qualifications have not previously existed, are that the profession may not be officially recognised by the relevant health authorities and therefore not mainstreamed into public health services, or that training standards and scope of practice may be inappropriate to local needs. Overall, the public may become vulnerable to unscrupulous health care practices. Health professions are regulated in order to ensure patient safety, as well as minimum standards of care and training within professions. Development projects must address issues of professional identity and official recognition of health professions and their respective qualifications through relevant local authorities, so that graduate qualifications are legitimised and the longer term objectives of the development investment are supported.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Assessment of the distribution of human and material resources for eye health in the public sector in Nampula, Mozambique
Dulnério B Sengo,Isaura I. D. B. Dos Santos,Laura Mavota Mate,Raul Moragues,Inmaculada López-Izquierdo +4 more
TL;DR: In this article , a mixed method approach was used, which included document reviews and application of a questionnaire to heads of the ophthalmology department in each health facility to obtain the list of available equipment.
Implementing a Two-Tiered Model of Optometry Training in Mozambique as an Eye Health Development Strategy
TL;DR: Results demonstrated that while tiered models of training may have developmental rationale, awareness of the profession and its place in addressing health needs, intensive consultation with local stakeholders and a thorough situational analysis are required for this strategy to be feasible.
Addressing avoidable vision impairment in Mozambique and the Africa region
Stephen C. Thompson,Kovin Naidoo,Joel Bambamba,Vanessa R. Moodley,Diane Van Staden,Amanda Forde,Kajal Shah,Luigi Bilotto,James Loughman +8 more
TL;DR: The body of evidence generated from the research provides useful lessons for development programmes in general, as well as specific lessons for delivering eye health education and service delivery models for low-income settings.
Additional file 1 of Assessment of the distribution of human and material resources for eye health in the public sector in Nampula, Mozambique
13 Aug 2024
Abstract: Additional file 1. Questionnaire on the availability of material resources for eye health care
Additional file 1 of Assessment of the distribution of human and material resources for eye health in the public sector in Nampula, Mozambique
13 Aug 2024
Abstract: Additional file 1. Questionnaire on the availability of material resources for eye health care
References
•Book
The practice of social research
Earl Babbie
- 31 Dec 1969
TL;DR: This chapter discusses the construction of Inquiry, the science of inquiry, and the role of data in the design of research.
20.1K
•Book
Research Methods for Clinical and Health Psychology
David F. Marks,Lucy Yardley +1 more
- 12 Nov 2003
TL;DR: The Practicalities of Doing Research Qualitative Data Collection -Sue Wilkinson, H[ac]el[gr]ene Joffe and Lucy Yardley Interviews and Focus Groups Content and Thematic Analysis as discussed by the authors.
1.5K
Analysing and presenting qualitative data
TL;DR: This paper provides a pragmatic approach to analysing qualitative data, using actual data from a qualitative dental public health study for demonstration purposes, and critically explores how computers can be used to facilitate this process.
The Use of Qualitative Content Analysis in Case Study Research
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore and discuss the possibilities of applying qualitative content analysis as a (text) interpretation method in case study research, and argue in favor of both case-study research as a research strategy and qualitative content analyses as a method of examination of data material.
Abduction: the logic of discovery of Grounded Theory
Jo Reichertz
- 01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make a contribution to the question whether grounded theory methodology (in the variant of STRAUSS & CORBIN) contains an abductive research logic as developed in the work of Charles Sanders PEIRCE.
564