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<strong>The</strong> Network<br />

towards unity for health<br />

VOLUME 27 | Number 01 | JULY 2008<br />

NEWSLETTER<br />

Networking<br />

within our organisation and linking with<br />

other organisations is of great importance<br />

to <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH. We can<br />

learn from each other, and also be of<br />

help to each other. <strong>For</strong> example, since the<br />

90’s of the last century, three Network:<br />

TUFH institutions have been supporting<br />

another member: Moi University, Kenia<br />

(see page 4). Another example of cooperation<br />

within our organisation:<br />

Maastricht students performing research<br />

at other Network: TUFH universities (see<br />

pages 24 and 25). As Jan de Maeseneer<br />

states in his <strong>For</strong>eword: “More is needed:<br />

not only <strong>network</strong>ing within the organisation<br />

but also links with other organisations/<strong>network</strong>s<br />

are important. <strong>For</strong><br />

example, <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH is engaged<br />

in the 15by2015 campaign, together with<br />

other important organisations, such as<br />

the world organisation of Family Doctors<br />

(Wonca), Global <strong>Health</strong> through<br />

Education Training and Service (GHETS),<br />

and the European <strong>For</strong>um for Primary<br />

Care (EFPC)”. Read more about the<br />

15by2015 campaign in the <strong>For</strong>eword,<br />

and on page 27.<br />

Marion Stijnen and<br />

Pauline Vluggen<br />

Editors<br />

In this issue, among others:<br />

<strong>The</strong> Present and Future of<br />

the Family Doctor 12<br />

Policy and Advocacy<br />

Integration into Training 15<br />

07<br />

08<br />

Grassroots Partnership<br />

in Vietnam 20<br />

Community Mental <strong>Health</strong><br />

Education in Nigeria 23<br />

15by2015: Quality<br />

<strong>Health</strong>care for All 27<br />

In the Newsletter we refer to<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: <strong>Towards</strong> <strong>Unity</strong> for <strong>Health</strong> as<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH.


contents<br />

03<br />

<strong>For</strong>eword<br />

Networking and Linking<br />

04 <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH in Action<br />

04 Annual International Conference<br />

‘South-North’ Collaboration: Friends of Moi University | A Cow for a Women’s Prison in Uganda | <strong>The</strong> Conference in<br />

Colombia in Brief<br />

06 Book Review<br />

Effective IPE: Development, Delivery and Evaluation<br />

07 Position Paper<br />

Interprofessional Education and Practice<br />

09 Improving <strong>Health</strong><br />

09 <strong>Health</strong> Authorities<br />

What Would I Change if I Were Minister of <strong>Health</strong><br />

10 Women’s <strong>Health</strong><br />

HIV/AIDS in Sudan | Nutritional Status of Children of Women Sugar-Cane Farm Workers | Female Genital Mutilation<br />

12 <strong>Health</strong> Professions<br />

<strong>The</strong> Present and Future of the Family Doctor<br />

14 Indigenous <strong>Health</strong><br />

American Indians and Alaska Natives in <strong>Health</strong> Careers<br />

14 Occupational <strong>Health</strong><br />

Noise Pollution in Pakistan<br />

15 Integrating Medicine and Public <strong>Health</strong><br />

Policy and Advocacy Integration into Training<br />

16 Community Action<br />

16 Community Interview<br />

Community at the Heart | New Brochure Education for <strong>Health</strong><br />

17 International <strong>Health</strong> Professions Education<br />

17 Medical Education<br />

Teaching for Learning, Learning for <strong>Health</strong> | Prevention Education Resource Centre<br />

18 Interprofessional Education<br />

Collaborating Across Borders | Interprofessional Education: A Personal Perspective<br />

20 Yellow Papers<br />

Grassroots Partnership in Vietnam | Embedding Indigenous Perspectives in <strong>Health</strong> Curriculum<br />

22 International Diary<br />

22 Diary 2008-2009<br />

23 Students’ Column<br />

23 Students’ Speakers Corner<br />

Community Mental <strong>Health</strong> Education in Nigeria | Network: TUFH Institutions Welcome Maastricht Students<br />

26 Member and Organisational News<br />

26 Messages from the Executive Committee<br />

EC Intelligence: Ian Cameron | 15by2015: Quality <strong>Health</strong>care for All | Tribute to…<br />

28 Taskforces<br />

Mini-Grants Supporting Women and <strong>Health</strong> Learning Package | New Taskforce: Social Accountability and Accreditation<br />

| Projects Related to Care for the Elderly<br />

30 Represented at International Meetings/Conferences<br />

Frontline Medicine: From Natural Disasters to Daily Care<br />

31 About our Members<br />

A Passion for… | Interesting Internet Sites | Moving On: Changes in Institutional Leadership | New Members |<br />

Re-Assessing Full Members


FOREWORD<br />

Networking<br />

and Linking<br />

paign (see page 27), together with other<br />

tional organisation of the curriculum based on<br />

important organisations: the world<br />

disciplines - with basic sciences at the beginning,<br />

organisation of Family Doctors (Wonca),<br />

emphasis on teaching rather than learning, and<br />

Global <strong>Health</strong> through Education<br />

in individual performance over team learning -<br />

Training and Service (GHETS), and the<br />

were clearly insufficient, faced with the challeng-<br />

European <strong>For</strong>um for Primary Care (EFPC).<br />

es that primary care poses. Thus innovation in<br />

In developing this action, the co-opera-<br />

health professions education became a key con-<br />

tion with GHETS has been utmost impor-<br />

cept of our institution. Many are the products of<br />

tant. GHETS provided a lot of support in<br />

our efforts, from problem-based learning to the<br />

the press-communication strategy.<br />

relevance of linking with all those concerned with<br />

the health of individuals and communities, and<br />

Reference<br />

to the ethical principle of social accountability, to<br />

Dr. Jan de Maeseneer<br />

GOODWIN, N., PERRI, G., PEIK, E. et al.<br />

mention just a few. But we have to recognise that<br />

(2004). Managing Across Diverse<br />

this process is so complex that no matter what<br />

According to Goodwin (2004) a <strong>network</strong><br />

is “any moderately stable pattern of ties<br />

or links between organisations or<br />

between organisations and individuals,<br />

where those ties represent some form of<br />

recognisable accountability (however<br />

weak and often overridden), whether<br />

formal or informal in character, whether<br />

weak or strong, loose or tight, bounded<br />

or unbounded”.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH exists already<br />

decades and is connecting similar-minded<br />

people globally to share ideas, form<br />

links and work together. In order to<br />

strengthen these links, yearly conferences<br />

are organised, this Newsletter and<br />

Education for <strong>Health</strong> are written and we<br />

have the taskforces, which are interacting<br />

more and more through listservs. <strong>The</strong><br />

most recent initiative in this field has<br />

been a listserv in relation to Social<br />

Accountability and Accreditation. It<br />

would be interesting to exchange our<br />

Networks of Care: Lessons from Other<br />

Sectors Report to the National<br />

Coordinating Centre for NHS Service<br />

Delivery and Organisation. NHS.<br />

www.sdo.lshtm.ac.uk/files/adhoc/<br />

39-policy-report.pdf<br />

Jan de Maeseneer | Secretary General<br />

Email: jan.demaeseneer@ugent.be<br />

Dr. Fernando Mora<br />

we do, or how successful we have been, there is<br />

always more to do. I would like to point to two<br />

areas of interest. Experiences in primary care and<br />

linking with service providers and communities<br />

have been interesting and relevant in many of<br />

the less developed nations, like India, Brazil or<br />

Uganda. <strong>The</strong>re should be a more concerted effort<br />

to enhance linking of people working in<br />

these areas that go beyond our annual conference.<br />

This is one of the central purposes of<br />

GHETS. It would also be interesting to analyse<br />

how much community work and educational innovation<br />

have impacted on health professions<br />

education world-wide. I think that conceptually<br />

there is a large impact, but this has to be reflected<br />

on the educational practices. Perhaps we have<br />

been limited in our outward reach, in our educational<br />

mission, and this is reflected on how<br />

some large organisations and groups<br />

(like the Global <strong>Health</strong> Workforce Alliance:<br />

www.who.int/workforcealliance/en/) are now<br />

where we were many years ago: recounting educational<br />

experiences in communities. This calls<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

views - for example at the coming<br />

<strong>The</strong> 15by2015 initiative also gives a di-<br />

for increasing and strengthening of our links with<br />

Conference in September 2008 - on how<br />

rection to our organisation: linking with<br />

our educational counterparts.<br />

weak or strong, loose or tight, bounded<br />

other organisations and <strong>network</strong>s - as<br />

or unbounded our links are.. Though,<br />

pointed out by De Maeseneer - but also<br />

At this moment, when the spirit of Alma-Ata is<br />

apart from conferences and taskforces,<br />

to focus on primary care as the most dis-<br />

riding again in the world, we have a golden op-<br />

more is needed: not only <strong>network</strong>ing<br />

tinctive of our educational origins char-<br />

portunity to regain relevance.<br />

within the organisation but also links<br />

acteristic in 1978. <strong>The</strong> reorganisation of<br />

with other organisations/<strong>network</strong>s are<br />

the educational process was recognised<br />

Fernando Mora | Global <strong>Health</strong> through<br />

important. <strong>For</strong> example, <strong>The</strong> Network:<br />

then as a necessity if we were to focus on<br />

Education Training and Service (GHETS)<br />

TUFH is engaged in the 15by2015 cam-<br />

community-oriented primary care. Tradi-<br />

Email: fmora5@yahoo.com<br />

3


THE NETWORK: TUFH IN ACTION<br />

ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE<br />

Every year <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH organises an international scientific and <strong>network</strong>ing conference.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Conference 2008 will be held in Chía-Bogota, Colombia, from September 27 – October 2.<br />

‘South-North’ Collaboration: Friends of Moi University<br />

Establishing and sustaining medical schools<br />

who were interested in international health<br />

Conclusion<br />

in developing countries can be challenging.<br />

approached Moi to establish an ongoing<br />

<strong>The</strong> Friends see their consortium as one of<br />

Some collaborations between medical schools<br />

working relationship (Voelker, 2004). Upon<br />

mutual benefit, flowing in many directions,<br />

in developing countries and one or more med-<br />

learning about the institutions in <strong>The</strong> Network<br />

rather than simply as one of donor and recipient<br />

ical schools in developed countries have been<br />

which were working with Moi, the Indiana<br />

institutions. All of the schools have benefited<br />

helpful. However, medical schools in develop-<br />

doctors made contact with Maastricht and<br />

from joint research projects, joint application<br />

ing countries can be vulnerable to the sudden<br />

agreed to communicate regularly with all<br />

for funds, student and staff exchanges and an<br />

withdrawal of funds (particularly if they have<br />

the Network partners about activities. This<br />

international perspective. While many of these<br />

only one partner). In order to effectively shield<br />

‘Consortium of Moi Supporters’ has become<br />

successes might take place through one-on-<br />

themselves from withdrawal of support, medi-<br />

known as ‘Friends of Moi’ (or ‘Friends’).<br />

one partnerships, the benefits were multiplied<br />

cal schools in developing countries often par-<br />

by the inclusion of different schools.<br />

ticipate in a number of parallel independent<br />

Friends of Moi Work Together<br />

twinning relationships. This approach poses<br />

Since 1991, the Friends of Moi have met every<br />

We have found that the Friends model can<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

its own challenges, including the potential for<br />

lack of coordination, overlap and duplication<br />

of efforts, and conflicting advice.<br />

Consortium of Moi Supporters<br />

year during the annual Conferences of what<br />

is now called <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH. <strong>The</strong> group<br />

reviews the activities of all partners during<br />

the previous year, and they plan for activities<br />

for the upcoming year, paying particular<br />

include institutions offering broad-based support<br />

as well as individuals with limited resources.<br />

We have also learned that the contributions<br />

are most likely to be successful if they focus on<br />

the developing school’s expressed needs and<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

In 1989, Moi University Faculty of Science<br />

(‘Moi’) was established in Eldoret, Kenya,<br />

under the direction of the Founding Dean,<br />

Haroun Mengech. Mengech helped to ensure<br />

that the medical school had a strong community<br />

focus and used problem-based learning<br />

methods (Westberg, 1999). During the planning<br />

phase, Mengech and others approached<br />

and received support from three medical<br />

schools: Maastricht University Faculty<br />

of <strong>Health</strong> Sciences (‘Maastricht’) in the<br />

Netherlands, Linköping University Faculty of<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Sciences (‘Linköping’) in Sweden, and<br />

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Faculty<br />

of <strong>Health</strong> Sciences (‘Ben-Gurion’) in Israel. All<br />

three schools belonged to <strong>The</strong> Network.<br />

Representatives from Maastricht and<br />

attention to complementing the activities of<br />

their partners and avoiding overlaps.<br />

<strong>The</strong> success of the Friends collaboration has<br />

required open communication and effort on<br />

all sides. <strong>The</strong> successive Deans at Moi have<br />

nurtured the individual partnerships and<br />

coordinated the activities of the Friends.<br />

Each donor has developed its own area of<br />

focus, based on its own expertise but balanced<br />

by the need to complement the activities<br />

of the other schools. This strategy has<br />

not only allowed these areas to strengthen<br />

at Moi, but has also led to the development<br />

of expertise in the Moi staff.<br />

<strong>The</strong> universities of Linköping and Maastricht<br />

have both focused on preclinical educa-<br />

complement the activities of other partners.<br />

References<br />

MAJOOR, G. (1991). Collaboration Among<br />

Institutions Supporting a New School.<br />

Newsletter: Network of Community-Oriented<br />

Educational Institutions for <strong>Health</strong> Sciences,<br />

16, 10.<br />

VOELKER, R. (2004). Conquering HIV and<br />

Stigma in Kenya. Journal of the American<br />

Medical Association, 292(2), 157-159.<br />

WESTBERG, J. (1999). Making a Difference: An<br />

interview of Dr. Haroun K. Arap Mengech.<br />

Education for <strong>Health</strong>, 12(1), 108-110.<br />

<strong>The</strong> unabridged version of this article hasbeen<br />

published in Education for <strong>Health</strong>,<br />

Volume 20, Issue 1 (May 2007).<br />

Linköping first became aware of the support<br />

tion. To deal with this overlap, Maastricht<br />

from the other universities during a chance<br />

and Linköping have run workshops jointly.<br />

Kimberly Oman (James Cook University,<br />

meeting in Eldoret. Wanting to complement<br />

Indiana’s contributions to the clinical edu-<br />

Australia), Barasa Khwa-Otsyula (Moi<br />

and not conflict with each other’s support of<br />

cation programme appear to have comple-<br />

University, Kenya), Gerard Majoor<br />

Moi, they decided to meet with representa-<br />

mented Linköping’s and Maastricht’s contri-<br />

(Maastricht University, the Netherlands),<br />

tives of Ben-Gurion at the Network’s next<br />

butions to the preclinical programme. This<br />

Robert Einterz (Indiana University, USA),<br />

annual Conference (Majoor, 1991).<br />

suggests that institutions with different<br />

Åke Wasteson (Linköping University,<br />

approaches and affiliations can take part<br />

Sweden)<br />

Around the same time, a group of doctors<br />

successfully in a Friends model.<br />

Email: kimberly.oman@jcu.edu.au<br />

from Indiana University (‘Indiana’) in the US<br />

4


A Cow<br />

for a Women’s Prison in Uganda<br />

After attending the Network: TUFH 2007<br />

Conference, I remained in Kampala, staying<br />

at Hospice Uganda, a non-residential<br />

palliative care organisation. Through the<br />

Hospice, I met a young English lawyer, Alexander<br />

Mclean. Alexander has spent the<br />

holidays of his law degree in sub-Saharan<br />

Africa, mainly Kenya and Uganda, setting<br />

up clinic wings and libraries in prisons. He<br />

offered to take me to the women’s prison,<br />

Luzira, and I gladly accepted. Having seen<br />

prisons in Australia, I was interested to explore<br />

conditions in Uganda.<br />

Pasha Bulcow being officially handed over to Luzira prison<br />

On a Sunday morning, I met Alexander and<br />

his father at the prison, and after being<br />

given clearance, we entered the prison<br />

grounds. It was very different than what I<br />

had expected. Both prisoners and guards<br />

were all women, but there were many children<br />

around the prison as well. <strong>The</strong> grounds<br />

were not, as I had anticipated, a Victorianstyle<br />

block of concrete, but rather long dormitory<br />

blocks with corrugated tin roofing,<br />

and a few other buildings in a similar style<br />

(including a kitchen which had a roof but<br />

was otherwise mostly open to the elements).<br />

Between the buildings was gravel<br />

and grass, and prisoners seemed to be<br />

sitting around in groups unless they had<br />

specific duties. <strong>The</strong>re was also a cow<br />

wandering the grounds.<br />

As it was Sunday, the women were awaiting<br />

church. Soon, a Catholic group and an<br />

Anglican group of outsiders arrived to give<br />

the services. <strong>The</strong> women broke into the ap-<br />

pregnant delivered there, and the children<br />

remained with their mothers until the<br />

mother was released, or in some cases, executed.<br />

As the mother in this case clearly<br />

wanted to remain in the service, I offered<br />

to take the baby outside and quieten her.<br />

I held the baby girl for almost thirty minutes,<br />

and she barely moved in that time.<br />

She whimpered a few times, and tried to<br />

open her eyes, but she was very listless and<br />

non-responsive. When the service ended,<br />

her mother came outside to me. She was<br />

19 years old, and had been in prison for<br />

four months. She did not know when she<br />

would be released, and she had no family<br />

to care for her or the child. She begged me<br />

to take her baby with me back to Australia,<br />

to look after her and give her opportunities.<br />

I did not know what to say.<br />

I enquired how the children were fed, and<br />

Alexander told me the babies were breastfed,<br />

but that their diet was so poor that it<br />

should get in touch with Alexander to help<br />

fund another cow for the prison. Over a few<br />

months, they raised the money from the<br />

criminal defence lawyers of Newcastle, and<br />

sent it off to Alexander as a cheque. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

held a vote to decide on a name for the<br />

new cow.<br />

In June of 2007, a major storm had hit<br />

Newcastle, and a coal carrier had been<br />

grounded off Nobby’s Beach. <strong>The</strong> ship remained<br />

just off the beach for the next few<br />

weeks, until finally being pulled off the<br />

reef by four tug boats. It was called the<br />

Pasha Bulker. <strong>The</strong> new Luzira cow was<br />

finally named Pasha Bulcow by the lawyers,<br />

and is currently providing milk to the<br />

mothers of Luzira prison.<br />

More information on Alexander Mclean<br />

and his organisation, the African Prisons<br />

Project, can be found at<br />

www.africanprisons.com<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

propriate groups and the services began in<br />

was very difficult for them to lactate. He<br />

two large sheds. I attended the Anglican<br />

explained that the cow was there so that<br />

service, which was full of beautiful music<br />

the women had some calcium in their diet.<br />

Barbara Cameron | Student, Faculty of<br />

and dance, and was so unlike any other<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was not enough milk for all the wom-<br />

Medicine, University of New South Wales,<br />

church service I have ever seen.<br />

en, but at least it helped some.<br />

Australia<br />

Email: barbasha@gmail.com<br />

Around halfway through the service, a<br />

When I returned home to Australia, I told<br />

baby started crying in the arms of one of<br />

my mother - a Legal Aid lawyer in Newcas-<br />

the prisoners. Alexander explained to me<br />

tle - about the conditions in Luzira. She<br />

that the women who entered the prison<br />

and her colleagues decided that they<br />

5


THE NETWORK: TUFH IN ACTION<br />

ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE<br />

BOOK REVIEW<br />

Effective IPE: Development,<br />

Delivery and Evaluation<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

6<br />

<strong>The</strong> Conference in Colombia in Brief<br />

• When: September 27 - October 2, 2008.<br />

• Where: Chía-Bogota, Colombia (in collaboration<br />

with the Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de<br />

La Sabana).<br />

• <strong>The</strong>me: Adapting <strong>Health</strong> Services and <strong>Health</strong><br />

Professions Education to Local Needs: Partnerships,<br />

Priorities, and Passions.<br />

• Goal: To analyse and discuss how health<br />

systems, services and health professions<br />

education adapt and readapt to the local needs<br />

of populations according to the historical,<br />

political and cultural influences they receive<br />

over time.<br />

• Tracks throughout the Conference: educational<br />

track, research track, and Spanish track.<br />

• Key-note speakers:<br />

- Dawn <strong>For</strong>man, United Kingdom and Betsy<br />

VanLeit, United States of America - Strategic<br />

Leadership in Interprofessional Education:<br />

Perspective from around the World.<br />

- Valda <strong>For</strong>d, United States of America - <strong>The</strong> Role<br />

of Cultural Competency in Developing and<br />

Sustaining Partnerships, Priorities and Passions.<br />

- Wim Van Lerberghe, Belgium - Primary<br />

<strong>Health</strong>care since Alma Ata.<br />

- German Zuluaga, Colombia – topic still to be<br />

announced.<br />

• Post-Conference Excursions:<br />

- Visit the Arhuaco native groups at the village<br />

of Nabusímake in the Sierra Nevada de Santa<br />

Marta. During this three-day trip participants<br />

will have the chance to receive the message<br />

from the Arhuaco about their ecologically<br />

sustainable perspective of health, integrated to<br />

their traditional cultural practices and their<br />

effort to link it to the national health system<br />

organisation.<br />

- Visit the village of Agua de Dios during a oneday<br />

trip, where participants will have the chance<br />

to experience how the country has evolved<br />

overtime in its socially organised response to<br />

patients with Hansen disease.<br />

• Conference website:<br />

www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org/conference<br />

Book Review of: Effective Interprofessional Education:<br />

Development, Delivery and Evaluation<br />

Authors: Della Freeth, Marilyn Hammick, Scott Reeves,<br />

Ivan Koppel & Hugh Barr<br />

ISBN-13: 978-14051-1653-4, 206 pp.<br />

<strong>The</strong> major objective of the book Effective Interprofessional Education is to discuss and<br />

illustrate the development, delivery and evaluation of effective interprofessional education<br />

in both the healthcare and social service arenas. This book is written by authors<br />

who are well-respected in interprofessional education, including Hugh Barr from Britain.<br />

Although the authors state that they intend to reach a diverse audience that includes<br />

teachers, practitioners, administrators and funders, the book is probably best targeted<br />

for health professions educators whether in the academic or community setting.<br />

<strong>The</strong> book is divided into three sections with multiple chapters in each section. Section<br />

I includes a discussion of the fundamentals of interprofessional education and a definition<br />

of ‘effectiveness’. Section II focuses on the development and delivery of interprofessional<br />

education, while Section III concentrates on evaluation. Throughout the book<br />

there are practical real world examples and case studies from a variety of healthcare<br />

and social service settings. Although the authors are from Britain, they have attempted<br />

to use case studies from other parts of the world. <strong>The</strong> authors’ treatment of the subject<br />

matter is comprehensive. <strong>The</strong> multiple case studies are useful for illustrating the content<br />

of the text. <strong>The</strong> information is up-to-date with references to current peer-reviewed<br />

literature and important textbooks on interprofessional education. In the <strong>For</strong>eword of<br />

the book, John Gilbert from Canada characterises the book as a ‘workbook’ for anyone<br />

involved in collaborative learning. Section III on evaluation will be particularly helpful<br />

for educators and practitioners who wish to evaluate their interprofessional educational<br />

initiatives. <strong>The</strong> section on evaluation also includes a brief discussion of the issues<br />

associated with measurement reliability and validity.<br />

Effective Interprofessional Education is well written and easy to read. <strong>The</strong> organisation<br />

of the book into three sections helps the reader navigate through the content. <strong>The</strong> information<br />

is logically presented, beginning with the definition of interprofessional education,<br />

followed by a discussion of the development and delivery of interprofessional<br />

education and ending with the important topic of evaluation. Although there are multiple<br />

contributors, the book reads in a very coherent manner.<br />

If educators, administrators or practitioners are looking for a ‘how-to’ practical book,<br />

this will serve their purpose. It will aid healthcare and social service professionals in the<br />

development, delivery and evaluation of interprofessional educational strategies.<br />

This review has been published before in Education for <strong>Health</strong>, Volume 20, no. 1,<br />

2007.<br />

Wendy Rheault | Dean, College of <strong>Health</strong> Professions,<br />

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, USA<br />

Email: wendy.rheault@rosalindfranklin.edu


POSITION PAPER<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH Executive Committee decided to undertake the writing of a series of ‘Position Papers’ on issues that are<br />

closely related to the aims and objectives of our organisation. <strong>The</strong>y must be seen as starting points for further discussion.<br />

You may contribute by submitting a letter to secretariat@<strong>network</strong>.unimaas.nl, by participating in sessions on these issues at<br />

Network: TUFH Conferences, or responding to the electronic versions of these Position Papers at the Network: TUFH’s website<br />

(www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org/publications_resources/positionpapers.asp).<br />

Interprofessional<br />

Education and Practice<br />

<strong>The</strong> taskforce Interprofessional Education<br />

drive has been repeated by other legislative<br />

provement in service design and provision,<br />

(IPE) changed its title from multiprofessional<br />

and policy requirements in several different<br />

through improvements in interprofessional<br />

to interprofessional in order to emphasize<br />

countries.<br />

learning and improved integration of services<br />

the importance of structured learning with,<br />

and care provision.<br />

from and about different professions, by<br />

<strong>The</strong> link between multiprofessional and in-<br />

comparison with simply sharing a learning<br />

terprofessional learning experiences and<br />

<strong>The</strong> increased involvement of service users<br />

environment.<br />

enhanced collaborative ability within a mul-<br />

and carers in the design and implementa-<br />

<strong>The</strong> term ‘multiprofessional’ is used in the<br />

tiprofessional team or between agencies has<br />

tion of education programmes for health<br />

paper to denote a team, training ward or<br />

student group which contains representation<br />

from a number of professions.<br />

Mission of IPE Taskforce<br />

To enhance the quality of interprofessional<br />

education, learning and practice by drawing<br />

together experience(s) from the international<br />

context.<br />

Learning Together to Work Together<br />

<strong>The</strong> necessity for collaboration between<br />

health and social care professions and health<br />

and welfare/social care agencies arises from<br />

the multiple needs of specific groups of service<br />

users, the variety of required service responses<br />

to these and the need for effective<br />

information exchange and discussion with<br />

regards to care planning and delivery. <strong>The</strong><br />

lack of operation of functional links between<br />

agencies has led to a failure of service and<br />

increased risk to service users. <strong>The</strong> inability of<br />

multiprofessional teams to communicate has<br />

yet to be fully evidenced, but examples have<br />

been identified which indicate a change in<br />

practice which is sustainable following structured<br />

interprofessional learning experience<br />

within a multiprofessional student population<br />

e.g. (Dickinson & Carpenter, 2005).<br />

Evaluation of studies which focus on such<br />

interprofessional learning experience have<br />

been gathered by Freeth et al. (2002), Barr et<br />

al. (2005) and Hammick et al. (2007). Much<br />

of the interprofessional education discussed<br />

within these studies is carried out within the<br />

workplace and is not accredited by a college<br />

or university. <strong>The</strong> benefit of explicit relevance<br />

to practice can also be gained through placement<br />

experience within a multiprofessional<br />

team and also through a joint placement<br />

experience within a programme leading to<br />

professional registration.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Service User<br />

While the IPE taskforce has a specific focus,<br />

professionals is a feature of interprofessional<br />

education in the UK and has been addressed<br />

in the recent UK Department of <strong>Health</strong> project<br />

Creating an Interprofessional Workforce.<br />

Implementation of Interprofessional<br />

Education / Community and Work-Based<br />

Education<br />

A variety of learning and teaching approaches<br />

are relevant here, amongst them<br />

problem-based learning, collaborative enquiry,<br />

and continuous quality improvements<br />

(Barr, 2003) and also case-based learning<br />

(Lindquist et al., 2005). “Practice-based<br />

learning is seen as essential and can take<br />

many forms; observational study, shadowing,<br />

cross professional placements and experience<br />

on training wards” (Barr, 2003). <strong>The</strong> timing<br />

of interprofessional education continues to<br />

be a topic of discussion as is the issue of the<br />

importance of embedding or not embedding<br />

uniprofessional identity before engaging<br />

with interprofessional learning.<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

also led to a failure to respond to the needs<br />

there are substantial overlaps of interest with<br />

of service users effectively (Conway & Mac-<br />

other taskforces focused on particular groups<br />

<strong>The</strong> international context in which the IPE<br />

millan, 2003).<br />

of service users e.g Care of the Elderly, and<br />

taskforce functions recognises a number of<br />

Women’s <strong>Health</strong>. In addition, the delivery<br />

different models of community and work-<br />

<strong>The</strong> importance of multiprofessional (now<br />

of integrated service is an issue for the IPE<br />

based education, ranging from a joint place-<br />

seen as interprofessional) learning and educa-<br />

taskforce and for specific areas of health<br />

ment between, for example, social work<br />

tion for health professionals was emphasized<br />

e.g. Public <strong>Health</strong>, and Primary Care. <strong>For</strong><br />

and community nursing students as part of<br />

in 1988 by the World <strong>Health</strong> Organization<br />

this reason this taskforce is interested in col-<br />

pre-registration education to a uniprofes-<br />

(WHO, 1988) in their statement Learning<br />

laboration with other areas of <strong>The</strong> Network:<br />

sional community-based experience within a<br />

Together to Work Together for <strong>Health</strong> and this<br />

TUFH in order to encourage and enable im-<br />

medical education programme. <strong>The</strong>re is an op-<br />

7


THE NETWORK: TUFH IN ACTION<br />

POSITION PAPER<br />

portunity here for Network: TUFH members<br />

environments, but advances are being made<br />

paper 7. <strong>The</strong> HE Academy <strong>Health</strong> Sciences<br />

to learn from each other about the advantag-<br />

to change this. However, there are some ex-<br />

and Practice subject centre. Ed Colyer,<br />

es of these different models and to enable an<br />

amples of good practice. <strong>The</strong>re is a commit-<br />

Helme and Jones.<br />

expansion of joint placement and work-based<br />

ment to interprofessional practice by the pro-<br />

FALLSBERG, M.B. & WIJMA, K. (1999).<br />

learning where appropriate to the develop-<br />

fessional bodies in many universities in New<br />

Student Attitudes <strong>Towards</strong> the Goals of an<br />

ment of uniprofessional and interprofessional<br />

Zealand. <strong>The</strong>refore where interprofessional<br />

Interprofessional Training Ward. Medical<br />

skills, competencies and understanding.<br />

learning exists, collaborative education oc-<br />

Teacher, vol 21: 6, 576-81.<br />

curs and professionals learn together as well<br />

FALLSBERG, M.B. & HAMMAR, M. (2000).<br />

<strong>The</strong> strengths of a joint placement experience<br />

as focus on speciality practice.<br />

Strategies and Focus at an Integrated,<br />

have been recognised as having an impact on<br />

Interprofessional Training Ward. Journal of<br />

both students and supervisory staff, who gain<br />

Modelling of collaborative practice by practi-<br />

Interprofessional Care, vol. 14:4, p 337-51.<br />

cross/interprofessional understanding. Com-<br />

tioners from different professions is also an<br />

FREETH, D., HAMMICK, M., KOPPEL, I.,<br />

munity service learning is acknowledged to<br />

excellent positive driver for student interpro-<br />

REEVES, S. & BARR, H. (2002). A Critical<br />

be a valuable extension of community-based<br />

fessional development as is the delivery of<br />

Review of Evaluations of Interprofessional<br />

education for health professionals (Mpofu,<br />

key curricular and skills areas by members of<br />

Education. UK Learning and Teaching<br />

et al., 2004)<br />

a different profession e.g. delivery of clinical<br />

Support Network (LTSN) Centre for <strong>Health</strong><br />

skills teaching to medical students by nurses.<br />

Sciences and Practice, Occasional paper 2.<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

Enabling Students to Work Interprofessionally<br />

Part of the above depends on the interprofessional<br />

learning ethos being seamless across<br />

university contexts and during the practice<br />

<strong>The</strong> multiprofessional training wards run in<br />

both the UK and in Sweden enable students<br />

from different professional programmes to be<br />

guided by professions other than their own<br />

(Fallsberg & Wijma, 1999; Fallsberg & Ham-<br />

HAMMICK, M., FREETH, D., KOPPEL,<br />

I., REEVES, S. & BARR, H. (2007). A<br />

Best Evidence Systematic Review of<br />

Interprofessional Education.<br />

www.bemecollaboration.org/beme/pages/<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

learning experience. A synergy should ideally<br />

be achieved between the interprofessional<br />

experience in the practice learning environment<br />

and in the campus/university context.<br />

Effective interprofessional learning (IPL)<br />

depends on clinicians and educators being<br />

adequately prepared for their role as facilitators<br />

during classroom and practice learning<br />

opportunities (Reeves, 2002; Ponzer et al.,<br />

2004). Within the UK, practice teacher preparation<br />

is influenced by professional bodies,<br />

is often delivered uniprofessionally and does<br />

not necessarily address interprofessional<br />

learning and teaching. Many courses do not<br />

provide follow-up support. This arrangement<br />

reinforces professional boundaries, fails to<br />

prepare practice teachers to support prac-<br />

mar, 2000).<br />

You can read the unabridged version of this<br />

Position Paper at www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org/<br />

publications_resources/positionpapers.asp<br />

References<br />

BARR, H., KOPPEL, I., REEVES, R., HAMMICK,<br />

M. & FREETH, D. (2005). Effective<br />

Interprofessional Education: Argument,<br />

Assumption & Evidence. Oxford: Blackwell.<br />

BARR, H. (2003). Unpacking<br />

Interprofessional Education in<br />

Interprofessional Collaboration. Ed A.<br />

Leathard Brunner-Routledge.<br />

CONWAY, J. & MACMILLAN, M. (2003).<br />

Quality <strong>Health</strong> Care Delivery: Implications<br />

for Multiprofessional Learning. <strong>The</strong> Network<br />

reviews/hammick.html<br />

LINDQUIST, S., DUNCAN, A., SHEPSTONE, L.,<br />

WATTS, F & PEARCE, S. (2005). Case-Based<br />

Learning in Cross-Professional Groups - <strong>The</strong><br />

Design, Implementation and Evaluation of a<br />

Pre-Registration Interprofessional Learning<br />

Programme. Journal of Interprofessional<br />

Care, 19(5) 509-520.<br />

MPOFU, R., DANIELS, P. & ADONIS, T.A.<br />

(2004). Student Perceptions of Community<br />

Service Learning Experiences in Community<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Services. <strong>The</strong> Network International<br />

conference Overcoming <strong>Health</strong> Disparities:<br />

Global Experiences from Partnerships<br />

between Communities, <strong>Health</strong> Services and<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Professional Schools. October 2004<br />

Atlanta US.<br />

World <strong>Health</strong> Organization (1988). Learning<br />

tice-based IPL and does little to alleviate the<br />

International Conference. <strong>Towards</strong> Equity<br />

Together to Work Together for <strong>Health</strong>. Report<br />

isolation staff may feel. What is now needed<br />

in Education, Training and <strong>Health</strong> Care<br />

of a WHO Study Group on Multiprofessional<br />

are some role models to encourage IPE de-<br />

Delivery. October 2003, Newcastle,<br />

Education for <strong>Health</strong> Personnel. <strong>The</strong> Team<br />

velopment.<br />

Australia.<br />

Approach Technical Report Series 769.<br />

DICKINSON, C. & CARPENTER, J. (2005).<br />

Geneva: WHO.<br />

Clinical teacher preparation is similar in<br />

Contact Is Not Enough: An Intergroup<br />

Australia. In most courses there is little col-<br />

Perspective on Stereotypes and Stereotype<br />

Dawn <strong>For</strong>man, Jill Thistlethwaite, Katie<br />

laboration between professions or acknowl-<br />

Change in Interprofessional Education.<br />

Cuthbert, Isabel Jones, Marion Jones |<br />

edgement that students from different pro-<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong>ory-Practice Relationship in<br />

On behalf of the IPE taskforce<br />

fessional groups are learning in the same<br />

Interprofessional Education. Occasional<br />

Email: dawn.forman@btinternet.com<br />

8


IMPROVING HEALTH<br />

HEALTH AUTHORITIES<br />

What Would I Change<br />

if I Were Minister of <strong>Health</strong><br />

This column took me a while to write. <strong>The</strong><br />

Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement to<br />

truth is, the US healthcare system is unique,<br />

reward quality primary care might serve as a<br />

brilliant, and fundamentally flawed all at the<br />

competitive incentive for private insurances<br />

same time. If you are wealthy and have a<br />

to keep pace. Finally, I would start a major<br />

heart attack, you probably could count your-<br />

information campaign to educate the public,<br />

self lucky to have it in any major US city.<br />

in hopes that future caps on the numbers of<br />

However, if you are an average citizen trying<br />

specialist training spots would receive public<br />

to meet the basic health needs of your family,<br />

support.<br />

and maybe even prevent a heart attack,<br />

there are better places to be. I should point<br />

I do not think simply increasing the number<br />

out that we technically do not have a<br />

Dr. Daniel Waldman<br />

of primary care providers in our country<br />

‘Minister of <strong>Health</strong>’ in the USA, so this col-<br />

would magically solve all our healthcare<br />

umn will assume I was the US equivalent.<br />

satisfied patients and better health indica-<br />

challenges, but it would strategically change<br />

tors (Macinko et al., 2003). Additionally,<br />

the debate. A provider workforce more based<br />

We all know that the USA is alone in being<br />

the only industrialised Western nation without<br />

a national health insurance programme -<br />

a safety net that ensures basic healthcare<br />

needs are met. <strong>The</strong> US also has health indica-<br />

states within the USA that have a greater<br />

supply of primary care physicians, but not<br />

specialists, have lower mortality rates (Shi et<br />

al., 2003).<br />

in the viewpoint of primary care would serve<br />

as a stronger voice against those with purely<br />

financial interests, specifically the insurance<br />

and pharmaceutical industries. Perhaps then,<br />

the USA would be ready for a rethinking of<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

tors such as infant mortality and life expectancy<br />

that trail countries that are nowhere<br />

near as wealthy. Why is this That is a complex<br />

question, for a different day. It is important<br />

though, to understand that there are<br />

many parties with vested interests in the<br />

direction of the healthcare debate.<br />

At the time of writing this, the leading<br />

Democratic hopefuls for the 2008 presidential<br />

election are playing with ideas that keep<br />

private insurances in the loop for any comprehensive<br />

healthcare overhaul, while many<br />

Republican opinion leaders are responding by<br />

stoking Cold War era fears of ‘communism’<br />

and ‘socialism’. In this environment, what<br />

could I do that would make a fundamental<br />

difference I have an idea, but its implemen-<br />

Perhaps my father summed it up best, when<br />

he said “If you go to a shoe store, they sell<br />

you shoes”. Well, the USA’s healthcare system<br />

is structured to promote and utilise specialty<br />

care. Even the training of residents, the<br />

post-graduate level physicians in the USA,<br />

promotes the training of specialists. Medicare,<br />

a public funding source, pays hospitals to<br />

help subsidise the training of physicians, and<br />

the subsidy is linked to the hospital’s level<br />

of inpatient, but not outpatient service.<br />

Reimbursement for work done by medical<br />

providers also heavily favours invasive procedures.<br />

How would I try to increase the nationwide<br />

percentage of primary care providers This is<br />

a question not easily answered. I would start<br />

the priorities of its healthcare system. In the<br />

meantime, there would be more stewards to<br />

pursue the multitude of possible communitybased<br />

solutions.<br />

Who knows, maybe the newly powerful alliance<br />

of primary care providers would find<br />

they did not have that much to change that<br />

their increase in numbers did not already<br />

take care of.<br />

References<br />

MACINKO, J. et al. (2003). <strong>The</strong> Contribution<br />

of Primary Care Systems to the <strong>Health</strong><br />

Outcomes within Organization for<br />

Economic Cooperation and Development<br />

(OECD) countries, 1970-1998. <strong>Health</strong><br />

Services Research, 38:831.<br />

SHI, L. et al. (2003). <strong>The</strong> Relationship<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

tation would be a work in progress: I would<br />

by creating rewards for medical schools that<br />

between Primary Care, Income Inequality,<br />

make it my number one priority to increase<br />

produce higher percentages of primary care<br />

and Mortality in the United States, 1980-<br />

the number of primary care providers.<br />

physicians, and support the expansion of<br />

1995. Journal of the American Board of<br />

<strong>The</strong> USA has a lower percentage of primary<br />

state run physician-assistant and nurse-<br />

Family Practice, 16:412.<br />

care physicians (about 35%) than other<br />

practitioner programmes. I would also ask<br />

Western nations and Canada, where the per-<br />

states to set up taskforces that would<br />

Daniel Waldman | Staff Physician,<br />

centage usually hovers around 50%. <strong>The</strong><br />

creatively encourage the recruitment and<br />

Department of Family and Community<br />

number of primary care providers has some<br />

development of future primary care provid-<br />

Medicine, School of Medicine, University<br />

interesting correlates. Nations with higher<br />

ers, in ways that worked for their state.<br />

of New Mexico, USA<br />

primary care orientation tend to have more<br />

Continued attempts at tinkering with<br />

Email: dpwaldman@salud.unm.edu<br />

9


IMPROVING HEALTH<br />

WOMEN’S HEALTH<br />

HIV/AIDS<br />

in Sudan<br />

<strong>The</strong> lower status of women in society, espe-<br />

I wanted an explanation on why there was<br />

showed a lack of knowledge, and conversa-<br />

cially in the developing world, makes them<br />

a rapid increase in HIV/AIDS statistics.<br />

tions with policy makers showed that more<br />

socially vulnerable and an easier target for<br />

structure is needed. Women need more<br />

the spread of HIV/AIDS. <strong>The</strong> product of<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sudanese women involved in the<br />

empowerment in defending their rights in<br />

this vulnerability is the disregard of the<br />

research are aware of the existence of HIV/<br />

the different prevention methods and the<br />

possible different prevention methods pro-<br />

AIDS. However, their knowledge regarding<br />

concept of stigmatisation should be<br />

vided and acknowledged by the Government<br />

related aspects is rather low. Respectively,<br />

changed to help people understand that<br />

and the people. It is clear that women need<br />

41% and 37% of the women did not know<br />

HIV/AIDS does not affect ‘bad people’<br />

various options when it comes to these<br />

any symptom of STDs and HIV/AIDS. Main<br />

only.<br />

methods; the current ones are insufficient.<br />

modes of transmission were identified cor-<br />

In conclusion, I would like to repeat what a<br />

rectly, although still 10% think a mosquito<br />

wise man said to me concerning transforma-<br />

Women in Sudan have less access to educa-<br />

bite can transmit HIV. As a means of pre-<br />

tions that needed to occur in Sudan: “<strong>The</strong><br />

tion, with almost half illiterate, or have<br />

vention, most women mentioned the use of<br />

lower you come, the higher the changes”.<br />

completed only basic or primary learning.<br />

clean needles. <strong>The</strong> most important mode<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

This reality has changed over the past<br />

years, and more women are now enrolling<br />

in different educational institutes. Generally<br />

speaking, women in Sudan are bound to<br />

their homes, and they experience a lower<br />

was unprotected sexual intercourse, which<br />

was mentioned by just 32%. Only 79<br />

women knew about the male condom and<br />

most of them believed it was a contraceptive<br />

method more than it was a prevention<br />

Selma Ali El Sadig | Student, Faculty of<br />

Medicine, Ahfad University for Women,<br />

Sudan<br />

Email: selma667@hotmail.com<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

social status in their marriages. <strong>The</strong>y are<br />

not involved in policy making and they lack<br />

economical dependence, relying on their<br />

spouses financially. <strong>The</strong> concept of gender<br />

has a direct relationship with HIV/AIDS.<br />

Men have more power and more rights than<br />

women. <strong>The</strong>y have more access to education<br />

and employment to make money.<br />

Socially, they can go out, have more access<br />

to information and are more decisive on<br />

issues regarding sexual activities. This ideology<br />

of false power holding needs to be<br />

changed in order for both sexes to equally<br />

prevent themselves against HIV/AIDS.<br />

I carried out a study in Khartoum, Sudan, in<br />

three regions, each containing numerous<br />

women who differ in thinking, behaviour,<br />

education and lifestyle. My main objective<br />

was to find out how much they knew on<br />

HIV/AIDS: what the disease is, how it is<br />

transmitted and what are the various prevention<br />

methods. Secondly, I wanted to<br />

know their perspectives on the current<br />

HIV/AIDS policy and whether it is suitable<br />

or should be changed. I also interviewed<br />

policy makers from the Government and<br />

NGOs, seeking their ideas on this issue.<br />

method for HIV/AIDS and other sexually<br />

transmitted diseases. <strong>The</strong> best ways to<br />

inform women according to the respondents<br />

are seminars, lectures and videos.<br />

Secondly, the influence of the Islam is<br />

shown here; religious awareness and good<br />

morals are the second best way!<br />

As for policy implementation, it seems that<br />

the Government shows a lack of funding<br />

and the HIV/AIDS issue is not on top of the<br />

list, since the Government already has to<br />

deal with the conflicts in the south and in<br />

Darfur. <strong>The</strong> other problem is programme<br />

implementation and the unclear Government<br />

structure. <strong>The</strong>re needs to be a better<br />

co-operation among all players on the field<br />

to yield a better outcome. <strong>The</strong> Sudanese<br />

NGOs need to formulise their implementation<br />

structure and harmonise with the other<br />

organisations so as to know what each is<br />

doing.<br />

Different changes are necessary for the<br />

short and long term. <strong>The</strong> identification of<br />

the needs compared with current policy<br />

showed that the current one is not sufficient<br />

for women. <strong>The</strong> interviews with women<br />

Women need more<br />

empowerment<br />

in defending their<br />

rights in the<br />

different prevention<br />

methods<br />

and the concept<br />

of stigmatisation<br />

should be<br />

changed to help<br />

people understand<br />

that HIV/AIDS<br />

does not affect<br />

‘bad people’ only.<br />

10


Nutritional Status of Children of<br />

Women Sugar-Cane Farm Workers<br />

Under-five malnutrition is high in the Siaya<br />

District, Kenya: stunting (47%); underweight<br />

(30%), and wasted (7%) (Bloss et al., 2004).<br />

Early cessation of breastfeeding in a resourcepoor<br />

environment leads to chronic malnutrition,<br />

morbidity and mortality (Coutsoudis<br />

and Bentley, 2004). Maternal income-<br />

generating activities add to household<br />

income, but often decrease mother’s time for<br />

child-caring, leaving care-giving to relatives<br />

(Pierre-Louis, 2007).<br />

Cross-Sectional Study<br />

Women sugar-cane farm workers in Kenya<br />

work for long hours that deprive them of<br />

quality time for child-caring. Women-specific<br />

issues such as maternity leave, proper daycare<br />

centres, equal pay-for-work, and regular<br />

medical checks are not addressed by their<br />

employers. Occupational health and safety<br />

are major issues compromising their health<br />

during pregnancy. To determine the duration<br />

of breastfeeding among sugar-cane farm<br />

workers, and to assess the nutritional status<br />

of their children, a cross-sectional study was<br />

implemented to determine the feeding patterns<br />

of 128 children, aged 3 to 24 months,<br />

whose mothers work in sugar-cane farms.<br />

Mothers were interviewed on breastfeeding<br />

duration and infant-feeding practices.<br />

Children’s weights and lengths were measured<br />

on Salter’s weighing scales and studio<br />

meters respectively. Anthropometric parameters<br />

of weight-for-age, length-for-age and<br />

weight-for-length were used to assess nutritional<br />

status.<br />

Results<br />

<strong>The</strong> women worked daily for 10 hours without<br />

leave, resulting in early cessation of<br />

breastfeeding. <strong>The</strong>y earned 80 shillings per<br />

day; inadequate to purchase nutritious<br />

replacement feeds. Children


IMPROVING HEALTH<br />

HEALTH PROFESSIONS<br />

<strong>The</strong> Present and Future<br />

of the Family Doctor<br />

To a large extent, Huxley’s Brave New<br />

public’; mankind forgot about prospective<br />

<strong>The</strong> various national health systems have<br />

World has become reality. With economic,<br />

behaviour as one parameter out of several<br />

different approaches towards an eco-politi-<br />

technical and IT developments, and with<br />

precautionary principles of survival strat-<br />

cal solution, but they fail to solve conflicts<br />

increases in numbers, the individuals of<br />

egy. However, in our ‘developed world’,<br />

of interest. We, general practitioners or<br />

the human species have become kind of<br />

dissolving patterns of family corporate<br />

family doctors, have to find ways to mini-<br />

registered product. <strong>The</strong>se so-called ‘human<br />

identity (FCI) and family financed support<br />

mise the burden of individual suffering of<br />

resources’ are administrated by more or<br />

for family members in need are still to be<br />

patients and disabled people. We have to<br />

less anonymous authorities and institu-<br />

found in immigrant families with Hispanic,<br />

make the best under the economic pressure<br />

tions, which are often not compatible with<br />

Arabian or Asian background.<br />

and with restricted resources left for the<br />

traditional patterns of healthcare.<br />

social and health sector by economic and<br />

Example Two: Economy<br />

politics.<br />

<strong>The</strong> traditional family doctor can be trust-<br />

Welfare and <strong>Health</strong> for All submitted to<br />

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ed to give advice, protect and support the<br />

individual patients in their struggle for life<br />

and health.<br />

Europe’s social history founded political<br />

systems based on social welfare and<br />

<strong>Health</strong> for All. <strong>The</strong>se ideas have been<br />

spread by organisations acting globally,<br />

like UN, WHO or Wonca.<br />

Administrating these ‘human resources’<br />

- ready to use and productive with high<br />

efficiency - requires structures like the<br />

medical services, that guarantee availability<br />

at minimal cost for application and<br />

capacities of maintenance.<br />

<strong>The</strong> role of the family doctor has changed<br />

accordingly to a functioning instrument in<br />

a complex social construction. To detect<br />

the conflicts of interest that arise, one<br />

needs to analyse these phenomena from<br />

various view points.<br />

Example One: Survival of the Species<br />

<strong>The</strong> doctor is no longer the highly educated<br />

specialist in matters of health, called<br />

public responsibility causes expenses for<br />

the society. Private equity is needed, the<br />

use of which will be controlled by the<br />

donors. Consequently, the following questions<br />

will arise:<br />

• Will a reduced cost of maintenance of<br />

the human resources also reduce follow<br />

up costs<br />

• Do we need those people over age X, who<br />

have outgrown the productive period of<br />

their lifespan statistically calculated<br />

• Do we still need all these people consuming<br />

health and social services<br />

• To which extend can we influence the<br />

servicing staff, their technical resources<br />

and their education to reduce cost<br />

Example Three: Advocate for Deprived<br />

Individuals<br />

Individuals are left to themselves fighting<br />

loss of mental or physical capacities, their<br />

diseases, their pain. What they wish for<br />

and need was an independent solicitor<br />

(a family doctor), making a stand for their<br />

individual needs and achieve the neces-<br />

<strong>The</strong> seed you<br />

invest today<br />

will be the base<br />

of a sustainable<br />

social and<br />

healthcare<br />

system in the<br />

future.<br />

Austrian Family Doctors<br />

Let me give you an example of a working<br />

generalist group practice in the middle of<br />

a European city. Following the tradition of<br />

Austrian GP/FM doctors since World War II,<br />

these family doctors have been educated<br />

as ‘solicitors’ for their patients, as ‘freelancers<br />

in causa health’ for individuals.<br />

by the suffering individual patients in their<br />

sary support.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y never lost linkage to basic medical<br />

socio-economic micro cosmos, the family.<br />

Confronted with today’s reality, we thus<br />

science, and followed up on research and<br />

<strong>The</strong> doctor is obliged to come, contracted<br />

have to ask:<br />

newly designed technical developments.<br />

by nothing more than the professional<br />

• Under these circumstances, can family<br />

maintenance role within the new socio-<br />

doctors do their job properly and meet<br />

Another basic strategy has been to work<br />

economic system of public healthcare.<br />

the challenges of either side<br />

together in a group, and to implement<br />

• Are education and training focussing on<br />

as many skills as possible into the medi-<br />

Also, the role of the family has changed:<br />

the knowledge, skills and attitude nec-<br />

cal services offered at primary care level.<br />

the responsibility for health and welfare<br />

essary to meet the upcoming challenges<br />

This has led to long time results as: a low<br />

of its members has been delegated to ‘the<br />

in doctor’s professional lives<br />

rate of hospitalising of patients; a low<br />

12


ily doctors will be able to decide and act<br />

environment of complex systems not well<br />

independently to stand up for the needs of<br />

known or well described. Biological inter-<br />

Graz, Austria<br />

their patients; they can be a partner to the<br />

active systems are as complex as socio-<br />

top small scaled specialists; and special-<br />

economical and cultural systems are. <strong>The</strong><br />

rate of unnecessary co-treatment, double<br />

ists will be able to understand their and<br />

parameter sustainability gains importance<br />

diagnostics and multiple level treatment;<br />

their patients needs because they have<br />

with the system’s increasing complexity<br />

a low decrease of capita per month treat-<br />

the same roots of basic education.<br />

and reflects the ability to resist stressors<br />

ed, despite increasing numbers of service<br />

Communication will become easier, losses<br />

and/or the ability to use the resources<br />

providers in the area concerned.<br />

in transfer of information will be reduced,<br />

available within the system’s life cycle. If<br />

and misunderstanding caused by emo-<br />

one factor decreases, in consequence the<br />

Active Conclusions<br />

tional level feelings will be minimised.<br />

system’s benefit for all is also reduced.<br />

It is wise not to forget the roots and the<br />

history - if there is no history there will<br />

not be any future. <strong>The</strong> contemplative view<br />

of the facts can lead to reflected active<br />

conclusions and open an outlook into the<br />

family doctors’ future:<br />

• A medical education programme, well<br />

based on profound scientific knowledge<br />

(including various disciplines as physics,<br />

chemistry, anatomy, histology, pathology),<br />

will overrule so-called holistic education<br />

programmes.<br />

• Intensive practical training has to be<br />

added to the theoretical education -<br />

this could be a paid job with increasing<br />

taking of responsibility (practical knowledge<br />

is supervised learning by doing).<br />

• Specialising in top small scaled fields<br />

shows a high dependency on technical<br />

equipment (financial investment)<br />

and homogenously performed skills.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore, the time spent on specialisations<br />

could be decreased dramatically,<br />

but the basic practical education should<br />

be prolonged and obligatory for all<br />

trainees. It should be the basic outfit<br />

before further small scaled specialisation<br />

and acting bedside in own responsibility<br />

is possible.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se family<br />

doctors will<br />

be able to<br />

decide and act<br />

independently<br />

to stand up<br />

for the needs<br />

of their<br />

patients;<br />

they can be<br />

a partner to<br />

the top small<br />

scaled<br />

specialists.<br />

Science x Practice = Sustainability<br />

In other words: sustainability means strategic<br />

thinking and planning in a time frame<br />

for generations: generations of experts<br />

produced by the education and training<br />

system and generations of implementation<br />

of services run by those experts. <strong>The</strong><br />

seed you invest today will be the base of a<br />

sustainable social and healthcare system<br />

in the future.<br />

<strong>The</strong> multidisciplinary trained family doctor<br />

will be the effective service provider to<br />

cope with the future challenges of health<br />

systems. High standards of primary care<br />

with highly educated and well trained<br />

generalist physicians (‘family doctors’) will<br />

create a flexible and stress resistant structure.<br />

This may be the only effective and<br />

efficient instrument to preserve the traditional<br />

European socio-cultural advantages<br />

- the European Way - to respect individuality,<br />

personal freedom and privacy.<br />

Ilse Hellemann | General Practitioner,<br />

Medical University of Graz, Steirische<br />

Akademie für Allgemeinmedizin, Austria<br />

Email: ilse.hellemann-geschwinder@<br />

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Well educated and trained staff will be<br />

meduni-graz.at<br />

in a much better and independent posi-<br />

Equation<br />

tion, defending erosion of the right on<br />

<strong>The</strong> following equation will illustrate this<br />

individualism of their patients and to with-<br />

concept in a simple way: sustainability is a<br />

stand the pressure coming from politics,<br />

product and a main parameter to measure<br />

economy or patients claims. <strong>The</strong>se fam-<br />

efficiency and stability of processes in an<br />

13


IMPROVING HEALTH<br />

INDIGENOUS HEALTH<br />

OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH<br />

American Indians and Alaska Natives<br />

in <strong>Health</strong> Careers<br />

In many parts of the world indigenous people do<br />

Noise Pollution<br />

in Pakistan<br />

not receive high quality healthcare. This is certainly<br />

Noise pollution or sound pollution actu-<br />

the situation in the US, where American Indians<br />

ally means a sound which irritates or<br />

and Alaska Natives and other minorities receive<br />

annoys the individual. In other words, it<br />

less and lower quality healthcare than the rest of<br />

exceeds the standard normal decibel of<br />

the population. Consequently, American Indians<br />

hearing threshold which leads to stress-<br />

and Alaska Natives have the lowest life expectan-<br />

ful sound, thereby damaging the ears<br />

is unavoidable. It includes construction<br />

cies in the US or any nation in the Western Hemi-<br />

and subsequently causing stress factors<br />

workers, farmers, police personnel, fire<br />

sphere, except Haiti. Compared to other Americans,<br />

which lead to elevated blood pressure and<br />

fighters and musicians. <strong>The</strong> International<br />

the death rates for American Indian are 400-700<br />

irritability. In terms of audiology, sound is<br />

Labour Organisation (ILO) does not permit<br />

percent higher for diabetes, tuberculosis and other<br />

measured by a unit called the decibel. <strong>The</strong><br />

workers working an eight hour shift for<br />

chronic diseases.<br />

normal speech varies between 60-65 deci-<br />

more than six months above 100 decibel<br />

bels. An increase of three decibel doubles<br />

noise exposure. ILO advices a change of<br />

One of the reasons that American Indians and Alas-<br />

the sound. Heavy traffic sound reaches 90<br />

job or place to avoid noise pollution.<br />

ka Natives have poor healthcare outcomes is be-<br />

decibels. A sound wave measuring more<br />

<strong>The</strong> Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)<br />

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cause they are underrepresented in the healthcare<br />

work force. Minority physicians, dentists and nurses<br />

are more likely to serve minority and medically underserved<br />

populations, yet there continues to be a<br />

severe shortage of minority health professions.<br />

than 100 to 120 decibels is equal to a<br />

bomb blast sound.<br />

Karachi<br />

Karachi is a cosmopolitan city in Pakistan;<br />

monitors control of noise from airplanes.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y advise airports to be built eight<br />

kilometres away from the populated area.<br />

<strong>The</strong> World <strong>Health</strong> Organization does not<br />

permit constant exposure of 120 decibel<br />

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<strong>The</strong> American Indians and Alaska Natives in <strong>Health</strong><br />

Careers website http://aianhealthcareers.org/ is<br />

designed to encourage indigenous people to consider<br />

a career in the health professions and to provide<br />

them with information that can help them explore<br />

careers in 11 different healthcare fields. <strong>For</strong><br />

each of the 11 health careers, the following information<br />

is provided on the website:<br />

• An overview of the profession and healthcare<br />

needs that are addressed by the profession.<br />

• Steps that students need to take in order to enter<br />

the profession as well as descriptions of schools<br />

and programmes that provide special support for<br />

indigenous students.<br />

• Profiles of indigenous students and health professionals,<br />

including advice from these people<br />

regarding entering their profession.<br />

no less than two million cars, buses, scooters,<br />

motorcycles and rickshaws have led to<br />

environmental pollution, noise pollution<br />

and street congestion during working<br />

hours. <strong>The</strong>re are about 300,000 rickshaws<br />

in the city without silencers, which cause<br />

tremendous noise pollution, both from<br />

noise and also carbon and sulphur fumes<br />

emitted from the silencer. Loud taperecorders<br />

in the coaches will add to noise<br />

pollution and cause damage to hearing.<br />

Noise pollution is also contributed<br />

by the sound of factories, trucks, heavy<br />

machines, aircraft sound (the airport is<br />

within the premises of the city), fire crackers,<br />

loud music, headphones; they can all<br />

damage the cochlea.<br />

for workers.<br />

Control and Recommendations<br />

• Noise pollution is not a necessary price<br />

to pay for living in an industrialised society.<br />

We must reduce industrial noise. We<br />

must avoid constant exposure of workers<br />

to a noisy environment.<br />

• Training programmes to create awareness<br />

through media, seminars and charts.<br />

• Government and private sector to cooperate<br />

to conduct awareness programmes.<br />

• Vehicles inspection and fitness teams<br />

comprising of private and public sector<br />

to allow the vehicle on the road after<br />

complete fitness.<br />

• Awareness of school children and col-<br />

• Links to resources, such as national health pro-<br />

Impact<br />

lege students regarding hazards of loud<br />

fessions organisations, indigenous organisations<br />

Noise pollution causes significant health<br />

music and use of headphones.<br />

in healthcare and the health professions, sources<br />

problems, leading to the damage of the<br />

• Singers and music entertainers should<br />

of scholarships, and student organisations.<br />

hair cells of the cochlea, which can result<br />

be informed about hearing problems<br />

in irritability, stress and tension. It can<br />

caused by loud music.<br />

Jane Westberg | Clinical Professor, Family<br />

even lead to heart problems and high<br />

Medicine, University of Colorado, USA<br />

blood pressure. People get tired and have<br />

Kaleemullah Thahim | Assistant<br />

Email: jwestberg@mac.com<br />

difficulty concentrating. <strong>The</strong> working<br />

Professor, Consultant Ear Nose Throat<br />

potential of the individual is decreased.<br />

Surgeon, Karachi, Pakistan<br />

Hearing loss occurs in places where sound<br />

Email: kaleems92@hotmail.com<br />

14


INTEGRATING MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH<br />

Policy and Advocacy Integration<br />

into Training<br />

As we write this article, the resounding<br />

words of one of my Network: TUFH (African)<br />

colleagues is triggered. He asked, “What<br />

do you mean when you say ‘Integration<br />

of Public <strong>Health</strong> and Medicine’”. As we<br />

proceeded to explain to him the current<br />

movement to integrate the concepts and<br />

principles of public health in undergraduate<br />

and graduate medical curriculum, he<br />

politely stopped us by asking the simple<br />

question “Don’t all doctors do that”. His<br />

question informed us that medicine has<br />

once again come full circle, within a system<br />

of care, to affect population outcomes and<br />

not just individual patients. <strong>The</strong> simple act<br />

of engaging Family Medicine (FM) residents<br />

in policy and advocacy is a testament of<br />

how we are now revisiting what once was a<br />

norm for healers throughout the world.<br />

Advocacy Efforts<br />

FM residents in the University of New<br />

Mexico’s (UNM) Department of Family and<br />

Community Medicine (DFCM) are engaged<br />

in an effort to affect healthcare outcomes,<br />

not only at the individual level, but at the<br />

community level. <strong>The</strong> FM residents recently<br />

began their advocacy efforts under the tutelage<br />

of Sally Bachofer and Arthur Kaufman.<br />

Daily, FM residents interact with patients<br />

afflicted with ailments and diseases that<br />

are associated with or triggered by ecological<br />

factors or determinants of health. While<br />

generally, we expect that the residents will<br />

be skilled in treating or positively affecting<br />

the bio-medical aspects of the patient,<br />

we recognise that the residents’ education<br />

is equally fuelled by training to create<br />

change through advocacy and/or policy<br />

development. It is not enough to say that<br />

the patient is non-compliant or is not following<br />

the treatment protocol. We must<br />

also train residents to see what aspects of<br />

the patients’ lives might hinder their ability<br />

to comply with the physicians’ treatment<br />

plan. One approach to engaging the FM<br />

residents in community change is through<br />

an active investigation of current policies.<br />

<strong>The</strong> policies may be structured within the<br />

framework of an organisation, agency, clinic,<br />

hospital, and/or within the local, state,<br />

or federal Government.<br />

Competencies<br />

<strong>The</strong> American College of Graduate Medical<br />

Education has restructured the paradigm<br />

of residency education to focus on competencies<br />

and outcomes (www.acgme.org/<br />

outcome/comp/GeneralCompetenciesStan<br />

dards21307.pdf, retrieved June 10, 2008).<br />

<strong>The</strong> Systems Based Practice competency<br />

includes two elements that apply to advocacy<br />

and policy development: “participate in<br />

identifying system errors and implementing<br />

potential system solutions”, and “advocate<br />

for quality patient care and optimal patient<br />

care systems”. <strong>The</strong> UNM residents have<br />

been involved in several initiatives to gain<br />

skills and knowledge aimed at fulfilling<br />

these competencies. Residents may elect<br />

to incorporate the Department of Family<br />

and Community Medicine’s Public <strong>Health</strong><br />

Certificate programme into their curriculum.<br />

Residents are involved directly in policy<br />

and advocacy activities during their clinical<br />

experiences, both in the hospital and<br />

through their continuity clinics. A couple of<br />

policy and advocacy projects in which the<br />

residents were engaged are outlined below.<br />

Projects<br />

Expanded Pharmacy Hours<br />

Patients were frequently admitted to the hospital<br />

because their access to medications was<br />

limited by restricted hours of the University<br />

Pharmacy. After meeting with the pharmacy<br />

staff and investigating other indigent pharmacy<br />

systems, the residents presented a<br />

report to the administration that resulted in<br />

the expansion of pharmacy hours.<br />

Advocacy for Expanded Social Services<br />

Delayed discharges and subsequent overcrowding<br />

of the emergency department<br />

We must also<br />

train residents<br />

to see what<br />

aspects of the<br />

patients’ lives<br />

might hinder<br />

their ability to<br />

comply with<br />

the physicians’<br />

treatment plan.<br />

has a broad impact on hospital function.<br />

By gathering data and learning about the<br />

pertinent management issues, residents<br />

were able to develop a collaborative effort<br />

with the Social Services Department, which<br />

resulted in the recommendation to allocate<br />

funding to new social worker positions<br />

which would help alleviate this situation.<br />

Conclusion<br />

<strong>The</strong> far-reaching impact of resident involvement<br />

in advocacy and policy extends beyond<br />

the individual patient or the focused clinical<br />

experience. <strong>The</strong> population of people whose<br />

healthcare options are negatively impacted<br />

by a particular policy may now be positively<br />

affected at new levels by physicians. At<br />

the academic level, residents who engage<br />

in policy development and advocacy, role<br />

model their behaviour for medical students<br />

to emulate. Physicians are empowered to<br />

liberate themselves from the confines of the<br />

office and impact policy that may contribute<br />

to the well being of not only their patients,<br />

but large populations at one time.<br />

Sally Bachofer, Lily Velarde, Vanessa<br />

Jacobsohn, Amy Clithero, Arthur Kaufman<br />

| Department of Family and Community<br />

Medicine, School of Medicine, University<br />

of New Mexico, USA<br />

Email: livelarde@salud.unm.edu<br />

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15


COMMUNITY ACTION<br />

COMMUNITY INTERVIEW<br />

Community<br />

at the Heart<br />

New brochure Education for <strong>Health</strong><br />

Education for <strong>Health</strong> (EfH) seeks/publishes<br />

manuscripts that:<br />

This interview was conducted with Lydia<br />

Sometimes students do research in a com-<br />

• address community-based education of<br />

Nanjula, a medical student at the Mbarara<br />

munity. Do you know of an example in<br />

health professionals,<br />

University of Science and Technology in<br />

which the outcomes of that research had<br />

• address community-based healthcare<br />

Uganda.<br />

positive results for your community<br />

delivery,<br />

Yes, I do. <strong>The</strong>re was a research initiative in<br />

• describe and evaluate collaborations<br />

What was your experience with commu-<br />

that same area. <strong>The</strong> needs of that particu-<br />

between academia and health service or-<br />

nity members, and with which community<br />

lar community were assessed. <strong>The</strong>re was<br />

ganisations designed to promote community<br />

members was that<br />

an effort to establish the community com-<br />

health,<br />

I went for my COBES training to a small vil-<br />

ponent in primary healthcare, and then<br />

• address multi- and interdisciplinary<br />

lage in the south western part of Uganda,<br />

let the people of the community know<br />

approaches to health professions education<br />

called Rugazi. I mostly interacted with<br />

that they can better their own health. <strong>The</strong><br />

and service delivery,<br />

mothers, because I was more into chil-<br />

community was told to choose their vol-<br />

• address models and systems of education,<br />

dren. <strong>The</strong>y were very welcoming, because<br />

unteers. <strong>The</strong>se trained workers went back<br />

research, and service delivery that link devel-<br />

they acknowledged that they have com-<br />

and they taught them to make a tap/jerry<br />

oping and developed countries.<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

munity problems that they have to solve.<br />

<strong>The</strong> people who were there before did not<br />

give them feedback, so they asked us if<br />

we were different. Another problem were<br />

the local leaders; they were aware of, but<br />

can, for hand washing after using the<br />

latrine. <strong>The</strong>y also taught them how to conserve<br />

firewood.<br />

If you were in a leadership position, would<br />

EfH informs clinical and<br />

public health practitioners,<br />

educators and<br />

policy makers about<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

not interested in our meetings. <strong>The</strong> locals<br />

wanted to listen, but the chief felt he<br />

heard enough of it. It is difficult to keep<br />

the community together when their leader<br />

disagrees.<br />

Were there also students of other disciplines<br />

working there, and were there ways<br />

to collaborate with them<br />

Yes, there were. It was a pilot study by our<br />

university to do a multidisciplinary elective<br />

placement. I was the only medical student<br />

in the group. <strong>The</strong>re were two development<br />

studies students, a teacher, and me. We<br />

were able to collaborate and work on the<br />

factors influencing children’s health in<br />

that area, giving a broader understanding<br />

of the issues in the eyes of a development<br />

there be anything that you would change<br />

concerning the position of students in the<br />

community<br />

I would try to facilitate the students more,<br />

to give them food, upkeep money, and<br />

transportation (some areas are so far, that<br />

you have to exclude them). And to give<br />

them a briefing and a workshop before the<br />

community placement, so that they know<br />

what they are actually up for.<br />

Imagine that you had to choose between<br />

community-based and hospital-based.<br />

What choice would you make and why<br />

I think I would choose community-based.<br />

Because if you tackle health at the community<br />

level, you prevent people from<br />

getting to the hospital level. If I worked<br />

global approaches to<br />

integrating health professions<br />

education and<br />

health systems. <strong>The</strong><br />

journal hosts an online<br />

forum to debate best<br />

ways to ensure equity,<br />

quality, relevance and<br />

cost effectiveness of healthcare in the developing<br />

and developed world, and optimal ways for<br />

training health professionals.<br />

EfH publishes original full-length research<br />

manuscripts as well as communications on programmes<br />

and policy perspectives related to:<br />

• community-based education of health<br />

professionals,<br />

• integration of medicine and public health in<br />

worker, a teacher, a medical student, to<br />

at hospital level, and nothing was done<br />

practice and medical education,<br />

finally come up with a report.<br />

at community level, I would always have<br />

• global health workforce,<br />

We first chose a topic, then shared roles<br />

a high patient load. But if I went to the<br />

• multidisciplinary health professions<br />

among the four of us. So if today we were<br />

villages and told people to just wash their<br />

education,<br />

to give a public health talk, and I am in<br />

hands; this is something very basic, but it<br />

• partnerships between health system stake-<br />

charge, I would be the one to get the com-<br />

solves a lot when you just prevent diseases<br />

holders for disease prevention and control.<br />

munity together, prepare the topic and<br />

through health education.<br />

research.<br />

Submission information:<br />

www.educationforhealth.net<br />

16


INTERNATIONAL HEALTH PROFESSIONS EDUCATION<br />

MEDICAL EDUCATION<br />

Teaching for Learning,<br />

Learning for <strong>Health</strong><br />

GOFAR is a comprehensive faculty development<br />

resource for all teachers and<br />

learners in the health professions. <strong>The</strong><br />

letters in GOFAR refer to Goals and the<br />

broad purposes of medical education;<br />

Objectives and the specific desired outcomes<br />

that learners should achieve;<br />

Framework refers to the structuring of<br />

learning experiences to support students<br />

in successfully achieving learning goals;<br />

Assessment asks to what extent were<br />

learning experience and teacher effective;<br />

Review poses the question, what<br />

should be done differently next time<br />

GOFAR represents a synthesis of 25<br />

years of work in health professions education<br />

by the Office of Teacher and<br />

Educational Development at the<br />

University of New Mexico, School of<br />

Medicine. It contains practical resources<br />

about how people learn, the development<br />

and effective use of performance<br />

objectives, community-based/ambulatory<br />

teaching/precepting, hospitalbased<br />

teaching, problem-based learning,<br />

lecturing and making presentations,<br />

giving feedback, assessing learners and<br />

using questions effectively. It contains<br />

guides and strategies for assessment<br />

and feedback. GOFAR has resources for<br />

teachers working in large classrooms,<br />

small groups, and one-to-one.<br />

GOFAR was written and compiled by<br />

Stewart Mennin, former Assistant Dean<br />

for Educational Development and<br />

Research and Professor Emeritus,<br />

Department of Cell Biology and<br />

Physiology, and by Deana Richter,<br />

Director of the Office of Teacher and<br />

Educational Development at the<br />

University of New Mexico School of<br />

Medicine. <strong>The</strong> website for the Office of<br />

Teacher and Educational Development<br />

(http://hsc.unm.edu/som/TED) has a<br />

wealth of faculty development materials,<br />

resources, presentations, et cetera. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

is a section on the Medical Education<br />

Scholars Programme designed to help<br />

secure the succession of leadership and<br />

innovation in health professions education<br />

at the University of New Mexico and<br />

a section on residents as teachers.<br />

GOFAR is also available in Farsi, generously<br />

translated by Marzieh Moattari<br />

from Shiraz University of Medical<br />

Sciences Faculty of Nursing and<br />

Midwifery, Shiraz-Islamic Republic of<br />

Iran. If you are interested in translating<br />

GOFAR into your language, please contact<br />

either me (smennin@gmail.com) or<br />

Deana Richter (tdevelopment@salud.<br />

unm.edu). It is free and meant to be<br />

shared. Let us know what you find most<br />

useful and what would make it better.<br />

GOFAR it!<br />

You can find GOFAR at www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org<br />

> Publications/Resources ><br />

Further reading > Teaching for Learning:<br />

Learning for <strong>Health</strong> - Quick Reference<br />

Guides for Planning, Implementing, and<br />

Assessing Learning Experiences<br />

Stewart Mennin | Professor Emeritus,<br />

Department of Cell Biology and<br />

Physiology, School of Medicine,<br />

University of New Mexico, USA;<br />

Mennin Consultoria em Saude Ltda,<br />

Brazil<br />

Email: smennin@gmail.com<br />

Prevention Education<br />

Resource Centre<br />

<strong>The</strong> Prevention Education Resource Centre (PERC,<br />

www.teachprevention.org) is a web-based repository<br />

of educational materials related to clinical<br />

prevention and population health. PERC is supported<br />

by the Association for Prevention Teaching<br />

and Research (APTR). <strong>The</strong> site promotes collaboration<br />

across healthcare disciplines, professions,<br />

and institutions by facilitating the exchange of<br />

teaching resources and connecting educators.<br />

PERC is envisioned to fulfill the identification of<br />

accessible relevant syllabi, teaching materials,<br />

examination materials, and curriculum evaluation<br />

approaches that may be used to teach each of the<br />

19 domains identified in the Clinical Prevention<br />

and Population <strong>Health</strong> Curriculum Framework<br />

(Allan et al., 2004) as well as curriculum frameworks<br />

developed for introductory undergraduate<br />

(college level) public health courses like Global<br />

<strong>Health</strong>, Public <strong>Health</strong> and Epidemiology. Expected<br />

outcomes for PERC include the provision of a<br />

searchable web site allowing the user world-wide<br />

to identify materials that are relevant to particular<br />

domains of the Curriculum Framework, applicable<br />

to particular clinical health professions, and allow<br />

for utilisation of particular types of teaching<br />

methods. <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH promotes the Clinical<br />

Prevention and Population <strong>Health</strong> Curriculum<br />

Framework as a conceptual and comprehensive<br />

source for a systematic analysis of its adaptation<br />

to different realities world-wide in underdeveloped<br />

and developed countries.<br />

Please, if you are interested in education of<br />

health sciences, in teaching methods and in<br />

the integration of education and practice, consider<br />

participating actively in this exciting collaborative<br />

effort by either submitting materials<br />

to PERC, or by downloading approved materials<br />

from the PERC site that have been reviewed and<br />

posted to the site.<br />

Reference<br />

ALLAN, J., BARWICK, T.A., CASHMAN, S., et<br />

al. (2004). Clinical Prevention and Population<br />

<strong>Health</strong>, Curriculum Framework for <strong>Health</strong><br />

Professions. American Journal of Preventive<br />

Medicine, 2004;27(5):471–76.<br />

Jaime Gofin | Associate Editor PERC; Director<br />

Community-Oriented Primary Care, School Public<br />

<strong>Health</strong> & <strong>Health</strong> Services, George Washington<br />

University, USA<br />

Email: sphjxg@gwumc.edu<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

17


International health professions education<br />

INTERPROFESSIONAL EDUCATION<br />

Collaborating<br />

Across Borders<br />

In October 2007, the University of Minnesota<br />

e-learning component. Many presenters noted<br />

could be used to communicate that impact to<br />

convened Collaborating Across Borders:<br />

that flexibility - both in curriculum develop-<br />

policymakers. Research questions may focus<br />

An American-Canadian Dialogue on Inter-<br />

ment and course planning - is key to develop-<br />

on the association between teamwork and<br />

professional <strong>Health</strong> Education, the first<br />

ing new, interprofessional programmes.<br />

quality of care, essential knowledge, skills,<br />

American-Canadian conference of its kind.<br />

and attitudes for teamwork and collabora-<br />

<strong>The</strong> conference drew 300 people from the<br />

Track 3: Through the Eyes of Students<br />

tion, promotion of IPE through accreditation<br />

US, Canada, UK, and New Zealand for a<br />

Students have been successful in designing IPE<br />

standards, and the best time in the curriculum<br />

three-day meeting focused on bridging knowl-<br />

models that have been adopted into the cur-<br />

to introduce IPE.<br />

edge, awareness and best practices in inter-<br />

ricula, as well as service-learning experiences<br />

professional education (IPE). <strong>The</strong> University<br />

outside the curriculum. Examples include: stu-<br />

Track 7: New Models of Care|Communities of<br />

of Minnesota partnered with the Canadian<br />

dent run clinics, interprofessional policy and<br />

Practice<br />

Interprofessional <strong>Health</strong> Collaborative (CIHC)<br />

case analysis, and pre-health interprofessional<br />

Emerging research in new models of care is<br />

to design the conference. Conference goals<br />

courses. Students recommended peer educa-<br />

demonstrating improved patient outcomes,<br />

included: showcasing American and Canadian<br />

tion; progressive curriculum development; sup-<br />

shorter patient stays and improved communi-<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

work in IPE; documenting what is and is not<br />

working in IPE; making recommendations for<br />

policies that facilitate interprofessional collaboration;<br />

setting an agenda to promote<br />

future continued collaboration.<br />

port for informal learning; opportunities for<br />

research; identifying student leaders; creating<br />

IPE clinical experiences; and creating an IPE<br />

office that provides support and creates the<br />

link to legitimacy, authority, and power.<br />

cation and learning among health professionals<br />

and students. <strong>The</strong> core themes supporting<br />

the development and successful implementation<br />

of new models of care include:<br />

• orienting new partners and giving them<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

From among the more than 120 abstracts that<br />

were submitted for consideration, conference<br />

planners designed seven tracks that paired<br />

American and Canadian presenters in order<br />

to provide parallel stories of IPE development<br />

and outcomes in the two countries. Highlights<br />

include:<br />

Track 1: Cutting Edge Innovations in<br />

Curriculum and Instruction<br />

IPE shares the broad goals of building teams<br />

of healthcare professionals: increased knowledge<br />

of professional roles, communication<br />

skills, and learning how to work in teams.<br />

A common concern was addressing ‘education<br />

to practice’; the fact that some students do<br />

not find interprofessional teams once they are<br />

in practice.<br />

Track 4: Faculty|Teaching Skills Development<br />

Presenters discussed faculty development literature,<br />

which shows that clinical faculty serve<br />

as role models for trainees and play a key role<br />

in the IPE learning environment. <strong>The</strong> literature<br />

also confirms that collaborative practice<br />

requires skilled, knowledgeable, interprofessional<br />

teachers. However, presenters noted<br />

there is little research about the effectiveness<br />

of IPE, or about a best practice model for<br />

educating clinical faculty about IPE.<br />

Track 5: Transformation|Change|Leadership<br />

Presenters discussed the merging of<br />

technology and learning platforms, such as<br />

‘hybrid’ or blended learning, which blends<br />

online and face-to-face instruction. Presenters<br />

a voice;<br />

• designing an atmosphere of respect and<br />

informality;<br />

• supporting team development by articulating<br />

roles, expectations and power;<br />

• providing flexibility for students through<br />

their learning experiences.<br />

Moving <strong>For</strong>ward<br />

<strong>The</strong> University of Minnesota has continued its<br />

collaboration with Canadian University partners<br />

to foster interprofessional health education<br />

across its borders. Current efforts include<br />

the Journal for Research in Interprofessional<br />

Education, expected to launch late 2008.<br />

Collaborating Across Borders II will be held in<br />

Halifax, Nova Scotia, May 20-22, 2009.<br />

noted a trend toward devices that are smaller,<br />

Track 2: 21 st Century Technology-Enhanced<br />

faster, cheaper and more mobile. <strong>The</strong>y dis-<br />

<strong>For</strong> more information about the 2007<br />

IPE<br />

cussed the use of portals to manage, cus-<br />

Collaborating Across Borders conference,<br />

Showcased were a range of innovative learn-<br />

tomise, personalise, and make information<br />

please visit www.ipe.umn.edu and click the<br />

ing opportunities, including a web-based<br />

transportable.<br />

‘Collaborating Across Borders’ logo.<br />

learning module that employs educational<br />

games, Team Objective Structured Clinical<br />

Track 6: Addressing Barriers through Policy<br />

Barbara Brandt | Assistant Vice President<br />

Examinations (TOSCEs), an online case study<br />

Development<br />

for Education, University of Minnesota<br />

resembling real-life experiences, and tradi-<br />

Several presenters identified the need for<br />

Academic <strong>Health</strong> Center, USA<br />

tional face-to-face courses that integrate an<br />

further research on IPE’s impact and data that<br />

Email: brandt@umn.edu<br />

18


Interprofessional Education:<br />

A Personal Perspective<br />

Interprofessional education (IPE) has been<br />

only minority educators have dared to<br />

described in as many ways as there are<br />

engage in IPE while the rest still wallow in<br />

attempts to implement it. <strong>The</strong> most recog-<br />

their singular, isolated professional prac-<br />

nised definitions, particularly for European<br />

tice. <strong>The</strong> majority ridicule those who try to<br />

and Western countries, have been sum-<br />

look for answers of complex healthcare from<br />

marised in a report by Della Freeth et al. on<br />

a broader interprofessional perspective.<br />

A critical review of the evaluation of<br />

Consequently, the general consensus among<br />

Interprofessional Education commissioned<br />

those who have accepted IPE as a future<br />

by learning and teaching Support Network<br />

reality is that it is still far from solving the<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Sciences and Practice from the<br />

real challenges of complex healthcare issues<br />

Interprofessional Education Joint Evaluation<br />

Professor Ratie Mpofu<br />

such as mental health, HIV/AIDS pandemic<br />

published in May, 2002. It emphasises<br />

and health promotion in general.<br />

shared problem solving and collaborative<br />

common site for interprofessional clinical<br />

decision making particularly in complex<br />

practice or a service learning module has to<br />

My personal experience is that for IPE to<br />

health problems.<br />

In Africa and other underdeveloped countries,<br />

lack of qualified personnel, limited<br />

professional programmes, sparse health<br />

facilities, increase of pandemics such as<br />

HIV/AIDS and the continuing challenges of<br />

poverty as well as political struggles, have<br />

forced professionals to work together and to<br />

be multi-skilled. <strong>Health</strong>care professions in<br />

developing countries have no luxury of specialisation.<br />

In most cases, the only available<br />

healthcare practitioner may be a nurse who<br />

is expected to know about all health needs<br />

of clients. <strong>The</strong> challenge therefore is to<br />

equip one health practitioner with all skills<br />

required for care of not only one individual,<br />

but also of eradicating preventable diseases<br />

in partnership with other professionals and<br />

lay persons.<br />

Attempts to train generic workers have had<br />

little success, and more recently, IPE has<br />

be developed since objectives are seen to<br />

overlap more in practice than in theory.<br />

<strong>For</strong> IPE to succeed, there should be an<br />

understanding of why professionals should<br />

learn together. Sharing an anatomy class<br />

may be cost effective, but may not produce<br />

interprofessional collaboration. <strong>The</strong> students<br />

from different professions have to<br />

critically review why they should sit in one<br />

class, learn the same material or attend to<br />

the same client. In trying to answer these<br />

questions, students may discover the<br />

amount of overlapping knowledge, both<br />

theoretical and practical, coupled with the<br />

strength of each professional expertise<br />

which they will require to practice collaboratively.<br />

In most cases, this overlap of knowledge<br />

has kept professionals apart, emanating<br />

into professional and protective professional<br />

acts, which in some cases do not<br />

allow for interprofesional practice. <strong>The</strong> professional<br />

boards often set learning out-<br />

succeed the following should be taken into<br />

consideration: development of core courses<br />

combining theoretical and practical knowledge;<br />

designation of sites for collaborative<br />

practice with generic educators or supervisors;<br />

the involvement of lay persons, e.g.<br />

communities in developing the curricula<br />

and student supervision; a generic assessment<br />

system for students; analytical teaching<br />

methods allowing for sharing of ideas<br />

among the different profession.<br />

Those who have attempted interprofessional<br />

education will agree that challenges<br />

include finding a common depth of knowledge,<br />

synchronising curricula and timetabling<br />

difficulties as well as developing<br />

common method of assessment of learning<br />

outcomes.<br />

<strong>For</strong> all professions to learn together for the<br />

benefit of the clients and communities they<br />

serve, changes have to be made at curricula<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

been seen as an acceptable alternative<br />

comes and competences in line with their<br />

and professional attitude level. Finally, the<br />

since it does not challenge professional<br />

international partners without reference to<br />

willingness to analyse and participate in<br />

identity. IPE requires several approaches,<br />

the growing interprofessional practice need-<br />

this process no matter what profession one<br />

such as more than one profession learning<br />

ed for comprehensive healthcare in under-<br />

comes from is the key to the success of IPE.<br />

together using the same learning materials,<br />

developed countries.<br />

tutors and time tables with the aim of<br />

Ratie Mpofu | Dean, Faculty of Community<br />

achieving the same goals. <strong>The</strong> assumption<br />

More recently, the definitions of interprofes-<br />

and <strong>Health</strong> Sciences, <strong>The</strong> University of the<br />

is that there is generic knowledge and skills<br />

sional practice and collaborative practice<br />

Western Cape, South Africa<br />

which each profession should have, without<br />

have been addressed by the WHO Working<br />

Email: rmpofu@uwc.ac.za<br />

losing professional identity. Further, a<br />

Groups, of which I am a member. However,<br />

19


International health professions education<br />

YELLOW PAPERS<br />

Between those outstanding publications that were already published in leading journals, and some preliminary notes scribbled<br />

on the last page of an agenda, there are also papers or reports that belong to the in-between (‘grey area’) category. Papers that,<br />

for whatever reason, have not been published before. Within this ocean of ‘grey’ papers, there are some which by content are most<br />

relevant to the Network: TUFH’s mission and aims. We will pick those pieces of gold from the ‘grey’ ocean, change their status to<br />

‘yellow’ (because we can’t print in gold) and publish these in this section. Here you will find two of such yellow papers.<br />

Grassroots<br />

Partnership in Vietnam<br />

This article describes a model of a commu-<br />

interventions. Stakeholder meetings gave<br />

<strong>The</strong> other side of the problem was in the<br />

nity collaboration in which young teaching<br />

opportunities for community members to<br />

medical schools; their teaching staff had<br />

staff at the Faculty of Public <strong>Health</strong>, Hanoi<br />

contribute their ideas to the plans.<br />

little experience of health problems at<br />

Medical University (HMU) learned how to<br />

village level and of how the rapid social<br />

work with grassroots health workers. <strong>The</strong><br />

In the second phase the same groups<br />

changes affect them. <strong>The</strong> teachers bring<br />

objectives of the programme were to build<br />

planned one intervention each, using an<br />

students to the community and need to<br />

both capacity of teaching staff for working<br />

evidence-based approach and the first<br />

know how to work in a participatory<br />

with communities, and capacity of local<br />

phase results. During the six-month imple-<br />

way with the local people responsible for<br />

health workers and volunteers to identify<br />

mentation period, the HMU teachers and<br />

health. To involve the local health staff<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

and address local health problems related<br />

to social changes.<br />

Courses<br />

HMU worked with three communes in a<br />

district staff provided supervision, not only<br />

to support the VHW and commune health<br />

staff but also for their own learning.<br />

Discussion<br />

and volunteers, an appropriate approach<br />

and way of working is essential. Key lessons<br />

that teachers learned from this pilot<br />

programme included the importance of:<br />

using participatory methods to create an<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

densely-populated, urbanising area near<br />

Hanoi, to build a model that supported<br />

health staff and volunteers at grassroots<br />

level in solving local health problems.<br />

A pool of trainers taught and supervised<br />

six staff of the commune health centres<br />

and 27 village health workers (VHW). <strong>The</strong><br />

VHW were the final target for capacity<br />

building as well as the link with community<br />

members during community diagnosis.<br />

<strong>The</strong> commune staff and VHW learned<br />

to identify problems and to collect data<br />

(existing and new), to describe and prioritise<br />

the problems, and then to look<br />

for solutions. <strong>The</strong>y learned by doing in a<br />

series of courses alternating with practice<br />

periods, in two phases.<br />

Village health workers in Vietnam are not<br />

staff in the health system, but volunteers,<br />

although many are retired health staff<br />

and all have had training in programmes<br />

lasting from three months to two years.<br />

With health staff at the commune health<br />

station, VHW constitute a <strong>network</strong> for<br />

primary healthcare activities, both preventive<br />

and curative. VHW are in a position to<br />

know about health and health problems<br />

in their areas, so they should be involved<br />

actively in evidence-based planning and<br />

management (Moazzem et al., 2004). <strong>The</strong><br />

history of top-down planning left both<br />

commune health staff and VHW passive<br />

in problem-solving, even in their own villages.<br />

Recent rapid development results<br />

in new health problems, so it is important<br />

enabling environment for learning and<br />

sharing; understanding differences and<br />

similarities between professional and lay<br />

definitions and perceptions and exchange<br />

of lay and expert knowledge and perception;<br />

joint supervision and evaluation<br />

between health service, university and<br />

community as key tools for empowerment<br />

and capacity building on both sides.<br />

References<br />

MOAZZEM HOSSAIN, S.M., BHUIYA,<br />

A., KHAN, A.R. & UHAA, I. (2004).<br />

Community Development and its Impact<br />

on <strong>Health</strong>: South Asian Experience.<br />

British Medical Journal, 328, 830-833.<br />

POTTER, C. & BROUGH, R. (2004).<br />

Systemic Capacity-Building: A Hierarchy<br />

to involve local health staff and VHW to<br />

of Needs. <strong>Health</strong> Policy and Planning,<br />

During the first course, the VHW collect-<br />

identify local problems and find appropri-<br />

19, 336-345.<br />

ed evidence to identify health problems<br />

ate and feasible solutions to them. <strong>The</strong><br />

in their communes, then prioritised and<br />

programme followed the systemic capaci-<br />

Dr. Luu Ngoc Hoat | Head, Biostatistics<br />

selected topics for action research. During<br />

ty-building model developed by Potter and<br />

Department, Faculty of Public <strong>Health</strong>,<br />

the second course, the trainees developed<br />

Brough (2004), based on their experience<br />

Hanoi Medical University, Vietnam<br />

research plans and quantitative and quali-<br />

in the Indian health sector, with support to<br />

Email: luungochoat@hn.vnn.vn<br />

tative data collection tools. <strong>The</strong>y analysed<br />

the four elements of the capacity pyramid:<br />

the collected during the third course, when<br />

structures, staff, skills and tools.<br />

they also wrote reports, including proposed<br />

20


Embedding Indigenous<br />

Perspective in <strong>Health</strong> Curriculum<br />

With the health of Australia’s Indigenous<br />

development of media-based learning<br />

peoples amongst the worst in developed<br />

resources within selected units, integration<br />

nations, and the health disadvantage of<br />

of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander per-<br />

Student learning has been impacted posi-<br />

Indigenous Australians so devastatingly<br />

spectives within assessment in theory and<br />

tively across 26 units at both undergraduate<br />

apparent, the importance of appropriate<br />

practicum units, and self assessment activi-<br />

and postgraduate levels, with over 7,700<br />

training for health professionals has never<br />

ties for students to reflect on their learning.<br />

students each year enrolled in the units that<br />

been more salient.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Yapunyah Project reflects an explicit<br />

have been redeveloped to include Indigenous<br />

strategy to systematically promote students’<br />

perspectives. <strong>The</strong> self awareness and per-<br />

<strong>The</strong> Yapunyah Project was an initiative of the<br />

understanding and appreciation of<br />

sonal development that students experience<br />

Faculty of <strong>Health</strong> at the Queensland<br />

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander per-<br />

through their engagement in the learning<br />

University of Technology, instigated as a<br />

spectives and competence in providing cul-<br />

activities of the programme provide a basis<br />

result of ethical, clinical, accreditation, and<br />

turally safe healthcare to health consumers<br />

for their learning outcomes beyond gradua-<br />

regulatory imperatives to develop cultural<br />

of Indigenous backgrounds. <strong>The</strong> project<br />

tion and into their professional lives. This has<br />

competence in health graduates with respect<br />

aimed to facilitate the development of pro-<br />

been facilitated by the integration of the<br />

to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives.<br />

<strong>The</strong> project was guided by earlier<br />

reforms in health curricula by the Committee<br />

of Deans of Australian Medical Schools and<br />

the Royal Australian College of General<br />

Practitioners, and by the cultural competence<br />

in healthcare delivery models of Campinha-<br />

Bacote (1998) and Cross, Bazron, Dennis &<br />

Isaacs (1989). It was also informed by the<br />

cultural safety reforms to health curricula in<br />

New Zealand.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Yapunyah Project involved extensive<br />

consultation and collaboration with<br />

Indigenous staff and health experts in the<br />

local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander<br />

community, and it carefully constructed a<br />

core curriculum and associated graduate<br />

capabilities. <strong>The</strong> overall project involved<br />

incorporation of Indigenous perspectives<br />

across four major undergraduate courses in<br />

the Faculty of <strong>Health</strong> (Nursing, Psychology<br />

and Counselling, Public <strong>Health</strong>, and Human<br />

fessional competencies that are fundamental<br />

to the provision of care that promotes<br />

optimal health outcomes for Aboriginal and<br />

Torres Strait Islander people.<br />

This project took a ‘whole of course’<br />

approach to the development of cultural<br />

competency in the health disciplines, and<br />

was implemented across first, second and<br />

third year units within four major undergraduate<br />

courses in the Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>.<br />

<strong>The</strong> goal was to move beyond a ‘good citizenship’<br />

model of Indigenous knowledge to<br />

one of professional competence in students.<br />

A crucial feature of the Yapunyah Project<br />

was the embedding of learning activities,<br />

including assessment, within curricula.<br />

Key elements of the programme included:<br />

• the explicit identification of expected<br />

learning outcomes and competencies;<br />

• the incorporation of Indigenous content<br />

and learning activities within a large num-<br />

clinical/practicum environment within the<br />

Yapunyah Project, whereby cultural competency<br />

is built into clinical units and clinical<br />

assessments. <strong>The</strong> project has also succeeded<br />

in enhancing the experience of Aboriginal<br />

and Torres Strait Islander students with<br />

respect to health courses and creating a<br />

positive impact on all graduates’ interest in<br />

and opportunities for employment in the<br />

area of Indigenous health. <strong>The</strong> continued<br />

and sustained work that has arisen from the<br />

Yapunyah project prepares our graduates to<br />

be proactive in working to improve the<br />

health status of Indigenous Australians.<br />

References<br />

CAMPINHA-BACOTE, J. (1998). <strong>The</strong> Process<br />

of Cultural Competence in the Delivery of<br />

<strong>Health</strong>care Services (3 rd ed.). Cincinnati,<br />

OH: Transcultural C.A.R.E. Associates.<br />

CROSS, T., BAZRON, B., DENNIS, K., &<br />

ISAACS, M. (1989). <strong>Towards</strong> a Culturally<br />

Competent System of Care. Washington, DC:<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

Movements) and one biomedical unit offered<br />

ber of selected units;<br />

Georgetown University Child<br />

by the Faculty of Science. <strong>The</strong> experience has<br />

• the integration of Aboriginal and Torres<br />

Development Centre, CASSP Technical<br />

been a challenging and positive one, and the<br />

Strait Islander perspectives within assess-<br />

Assistance Centre.<br />

reforms have been supported by a sustain-<br />

ment in theory and practicum units;<br />

able framework.<br />

• the development of a purpose-built web-<br />

Robyn Nash, Sandra Sacre and Beryl<br />

site and media-based learning resources<br />

Meiklejohn | Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>,<br />

Key elements of the strategy included the<br />

for use across the faculty and in specific<br />

Queensland University of Technology,<br />

explicit identification of expected learning<br />

units; and<br />

Australia<br />

outcomes, the streamlining of content/<br />

• tutorial and self assessment activities for<br />

Email: s.sacre@qut.edu.au<br />

learning activities within selected units, the<br />

students to reflect on their learning.<br />

21


INTERNATIONAL DIARY<br />

Diary 2008<br />

Annual International Conference of<br />

Conference - A Celebration of Diversity.<br />

Internet: www.primafamed.ugent.be<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: <strong>Towards</strong> <strong>Unity</strong> for <strong>Health</strong><br />

Organised by Royal Australian College of<br />

27 September - 2 October, 2008,<br />

General Practitioners and World Organiza-<br />

20 - 21 November, 2008, Maastricht,<br />

Chía-Bogotá, Colombia<br />

tion of Family Doctors (WONCA).<br />

the Netherlands<br />

International Conference on Adapting<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Services and <strong>Health</strong> Professions<br />

Education to Local Needs: Partnerships,<br />

Priorities and Passions. Organised by<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH and Facultad de<br />

Medicina, Universidad de La Sabana<br />

Further information:<br />

email: wonca2008@meetingplanners.com.<br />

au; Internet: www.wonca2008.com<br />

25 - 29 October, San Diego CA, USA<br />

APHA annual meeting. Organised by<br />

American Public <strong>Health</strong> Association<br />

Visitors Workshop: A Primer on the<br />

Maastricht Approach to Medical Education.<br />

Organised by School of <strong>Health</strong> Professions<br />

Education, Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>, Medicine and<br />

Life Sciences, Maastricht University,<br />

Maastricht, the Netherlands. Further<br />

information: School of <strong>Health</strong> Professions<br />

Post-Conference Excursions:<br />

(APHA). Further information:<br />

Education, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD<br />

October 3, 2008:<br />

email: comments@apha.org;<br />

Maastricht, the Netherlands;<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Centre Aqua de Dios<br />

Internet: www.apha.org/meetings/<br />

tel: 31-43-3885626; fax: 31-43-3885639;<br />

October 3 - 5, 2008:<br />

email: she@oifdg.unimaas.nl;<br />

Valledupar - Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta<br />

31 October - 5 November, 2008,<br />

Internet: www.she.unimaas.nl<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

Further information: Network: TUFH Office,<br />

P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht,<br />

the Netherlands; tel: 31-43-3885638;<br />

fax: 31-43-3885639;<br />

San Antonio TX, USA<br />

AAMC annual meeting. Organised by<br />

Association of American Medical Colleges<br />

(AAMC). Further information: Internet:<br />

www.aamc.org/meetings<br />

21 - 24 December, 2008, Ismailia, Egypt<br />

10 th International Workshop on Human<br />

Resource Development in <strong>Health</strong> Management<br />

& Leadership. Organised by Center<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

email: secretariat@<strong>network</strong>.unimaas.nl;<br />

Internet: www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org/<br />

conference<br />

1 - 5 October, Melbourne, Australia<br />

2008 Wonca Asia Pacific Regional<br />

Diary 2009<br />

1 - 4 March, 2009, Johannesburg,<br />

Republic of South Africa<br />

Wonca African Regional Conference -<br />

Family Medicine in the African Context.<br />

Organised by World Organization of Family<br />

Doctors (WONCA). Further information:<br />

Internet: www.globalfamilydoctor.com/<br />

17 - 21 November, 2008, Kampala, Uganda<br />

Improving the Quality of Family Medicine<br />

Training in Sub-Saharan Africa. Organised<br />

by Primafamed. Further information:<br />

email: primafamed@ugent.be;<br />

SCU), Ismailia, Egypt. Further information:<br />

email: CRDMED@ismailia.ie-eg.com;<br />

Internet: crdmed.tripod.com<br />

25 - 29 May, 2009, Washington DC, USA<br />

Global <strong>Health</strong> Conference. Organised by<br />

the Global <strong>Health</strong> Council. Further informa-<br />

for Research & Development in medical<br />

education & health services, Faculty of<br />

Medicine, Suez Canal University (FOM/<br />

SCU), Ismailia, Egypt. Further information:<br />

email: CRDMED@ismailia.ie-eg.com;<br />

Internet: crdmed.tripod.com<br />

15 - 26 June, 2009, Maastricht,<br />

the Netherlands<br />

Summer Course: Expanding Horizons in<br />

Problem-based Learning in Medicine,<br />

<strong>Health</strong> and Behavioural Sciences. Organised<br />

by School of <strong>Health</strong> Professions<br />

Education, Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>, Medicine and<br />

conferences/conferences.asp<br />

tion: email: conference@globalhealth.org;<br />

Life Sciences, Maastricht University,<br />

Internet: www.globalhealth.org/conference<br />

Maastricht, the Netherlands. Further<br />

15 - 19 March, 2009, Ismailia, Egypt<br />

information: School of <strong>Health</strong> Professions<br />

23 rd International Workshop on Commu-<br />

5 - 8 June, 2009, Hong Kong, China<br />

Education, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD<br />

nity-based Education Incorporating<br />

Wonca Asia Pacific Regional Conference -<br />

Maastricht, the Netherlands;<br />

Problem-based Learning, Innovative<br />

Building Bridges. Organised by World<br />

tel: 31-43-3885611; fax: 31-43-3885639;<br />

Approaches. Organised by Center for<br />

Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA).<br />

email: she@oifdg.unimaas.nl;<br />

Research & Development in medical<br />

Further information: Internet:<br />

Internet: www.she.unimaas.nl<br />

education & health services, Faculty of<br />

www.wonca2009.org<br />

Medicine, Suez Canal University (FOM/<br />

22


STUDENTS’ COLUMN<br />

STUDENTS’ SPEAKERS CORNER<br />

Community<br />

Mental <strong>Health</strong> Education in Nigeria<br />

I just concluded an insightful ten-week<br />

posting in psychiatry. I gained a panoramic<br />

view of mental health and some knowledge<br />

of how the attitudes, beliefs and practices<br />

of individuals in the local community affect<br />

the concept of psychiatry.<br />

<strong>The</strong> concept of mental health is integrated<br />

into the WHO (1986) definition of ‘health’<br />

or ‘wholeness’ of an individual, which states<br />

that “<strong>Health</strong> is a state of complete physi-<br />

Queens Medical Centre<br />

cal, mental and social well being and not<br />

merely the absence of disease or infirmity”.<br />

easily accepts issues on general body health<br />

psychiatry and community mental health<br />

Hence, when considering the general well-<br />

while matters on mental illness are treated<br />

education in Nigeria was in 1954, when a<br />

being of individuals in the community there<br />

is no need to fragment the health of their<br />

body from their mind, as they both constitute<br />

the total state of health of any individual.<br />

Stigmatisation<br />

<strong>The</strong> perception of psychiatry varies from<br />

community to community. Generally, mental<br />

illness is still being perceived as being<br />

spiritually related in developing countries<br />

like Nigeria. It is reported that about 70%<br />

of the population of Nigeria reside in rural<br />

communities. Lack of understanding and<br />

knowledge about mental health by the<br />

community contributes largely to the stigmatisation<br />

of practitioners (psychiatrists,<br />

other health workers, medical students in<br />

psychiatry posting) in the field of psychiatry<br />

as well as the patients.<br />

A brief story: a fellow medical student of<br />

mine was on her way to the psychiatric<br />

with rejection. <strong>The</strong> first point of call for<br />

most of these members of the community in<br />

the care/treatment of mental illness is<br />

traditional/spiritual healers, due to lack of<br />

proper understanding together with the<br />

traditional belief that the sources of mental<br />

health problems are spiritual. This approach<br />

usually prevents early detection of the factors<br />

that contribute to the illness. It also<br />

delays initiation of prompt and effective<br />

therapy.<br />

Gap<br />

Over the years more focus has been placed<br />

on community and family health education<br />

with mental health education being<br />

neglected. This reality has created a wide<br />

gap between attitudes and practices<br />

towards improving the general body health<br />

and that of mental health. It is therefore<br />

important that we scientifically educate<br />

the community on good mental health. At<br />

the same time they need to understand<br />

notable doctor, Professor Adeoye Thomas<br />

Lambo formed a diurnal hospital system<br />

around a psychiatric hospital, Aro-Abeokuta<br />

(during that period they did not have the<br />

infrastructure or manpower for the mentally<br />

ill) where the individuals in the community<br />

allowed patients to stay in rented rooms in<br />

their houses where they were treated and in<br />

exchange the villagers were given water<br />

and free healthcare services. This initiative<br />

was reported to have shown an effective<br />

enhancement in the mental health of the<br />

patients, improved prognosis and reduction<br />

in stigmatisation.<br />

It is important to note that community<br />

psychiatry involves the education of people<br />

in the community, preventive measures,<br />

therapy, rehabilitation and support of the<br />

mentally ill and those convalescing.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is therefore a need to create mental<br />

healthcare programmes and at the same<br />

time involve individuals in the community<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

hospital when she decided to hail a cab<br />

that apart from genetic predispositions to<br />

in its initiation. Apart from community<br />

going via that route. She was then asked by<br />

mental disorders, we are all predisposed to<br />

mental health education, the need to estab-<br />

the cabman where specifically she wanted<br />

a decline in our mental health; it should not<br />

lish population-based treatment and care is<br />

to be dropped off and when she mentioned<br />

be attributed to cultural phenomenon and<br />

also very vital.<br />

the hospital the cabman blatantly refused<br />

perceived enemies in their locality. <strong>The</strong>re is<br />

to take her there.<br />

hence a necessity to integrate this in vari-<br />

Igwilo Ugonnaya Ugochineyre | SNO<br />

ous organised healthcare programmes.<br />

African Representative, College of <strong>Health</strong><br />

This may be attributed to the poor knowl-<br />

Sciences, Igbinedion University, Nigeria<br />

edge of mental health due to inadequate<br />

Mental <strong>Health</strong>care Programmes<br />

Email: chinyerehumphrey@yahoo.com<br />

mental health education. <strong>The</strong> community<br />

<strong>The</strong> earliest account of community<br />

23


STUDENTS’ COLUMN<br />

STUDENTS’ SPEAKERS CORNER<br />

Network: TUFH Institutions<br />

Welcome Maastricht Students<br />

A Maastricht Student at Ahfad<br />

University for Women, Sudan<br />

April 2007 was an exiting month! It was<br />

the month I would leave to Sudan to work<br />

on a research for my Master <strong>The</strong>sis in<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Policy, Economics and Management.<br />

I had also completed a Bachelor in <strong>Health</strong><br />

Sciences and a Master in <strong>Health</strong> Education<br />

and Promotion, all at Maastricht University.<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

24<br />

Why did I choose Sudan I finished a<br />

Master’s degree before, so I had already<br />

done a thesis in the Netherlands. I wanted<br />

to try to do the same in a foreign country.<br />

Actually, I planned to go to a country like<br />

England or another European country. But<br />

then the university offered me an opportunity<br />

to go to Sudan. What to do It seemed<br />

it was not possible to go to England unless<br />

I arranged everything myself, which would<br />

take too long. Since three other students<br />

were going to Sudan as well, I assumed this<br />

was a good second option. <strong>The</strong>n the others<br />

decided not to, so I was by myself.... I still<br />

decided to go: off to Sudan!<br />

My study concerned a cross-sectional survey<br />

regarding HIV/AIDS prevention policy for<br />

Sudanese women. HIV/AIDS is increasingly<br />

affecting girls and women world-wide. <strong>The</strong><br />

first case of HIV in Sudan was diagnosed<br />

in 1986 and since this diagnosis, the prevalence<br />

in Sudan has been rapidly increasing.<br />

It is really important to change this rising<br />

pattern now to prevent bigger problems<br />

from occurring in the future.<br />

I hope my thesis helped to change this. My<br />

problem statement was: To what extent<br />

can the policy for HIV/AIDS prevention for<br />

women in Sudan be improved I formulated<br />

short- and long-term recommendations: the<br />

political commitment has to be improved<br />

by emphasizing the impact of HIV/AIDS in<br />

Sudan, testing for HIV, and using protective<br />

measures during sex should become more<br />

anonymous. Furthermore, the Government<br />

Ms. Annemarie van der Kolk with her supervisor Dr. Mohamed Moukhyer<br />

should involve the community to get greater After three months of many, many spoons<br />

insight into their needs. In the long-term, a of sugar (they like sweets a lot!), busy markets,<br />

climate of openness concerning sexuality<br />

incredibly crowded bus stations, sev-<br />

and related matters should be encouraged. eral death experiences due to crazy traffic,<br />

This approach might change opinions on sex interesting conversations regarding religion<br />

and use of condoms. Islam is an important and a lot of sunshine I travelled back home.<br />

factor, since this religion has a big impact I gained many experiences and will certainly<br />

on people’s beliefs and behaviour policy never forget this country!<br />

making. This religion should be intertwined<br />

with HIV/AIDS prevention.<br />

Annemarie van der Kolk | Student, Faculty<br />

of <strong>Health</strong>, Medicine and Life Sciences,<br />

This last recommendation on integration of Maastricht University, the Netherlands<br />

Islam is a very important one. During my Email: annevdk@hotmail.com<br />

stay I got insight in this religion and the<br />

way it impacts daily life. It was very interesting<br />

to live with a Sudanese family. I still Geriatric Depression Care<br />

remember the first time I was in the room in Rural Illinois<br />

and suddenly everyone got up, grabbed a Because of a change in the medical curriculum<br />

prayer mat and started to pray!<br />

at Maastricht University, the Maastricht<br />

Faculty of Medicine (now Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>,<br />

<strong>The</strong> research itself was quite difficult. It happened<br />

Medicine and Life Sciences) was in need of<br />

several times that I managed to make more off-campus clinical and research<br />

an appointment with someone and travelled opportunities for their 6 th year medical students.<br />

for an hour in a bus without air-conditioning<br />

(degrees up to 50ºC!). When I arrived at the<br />

institution and asked for the person I would During the Network: TUFH Conference in<br />

have an appointment with they replied: Australia, we started to talk about sending<br />

“No, he is not here, we do not know of any some of those students to the College of<br />

appointment...”. You have to be very patient Medicine at Rockford, University of Illinois,<br />

and persistent. But although it was hard, I USA. Our students do not have a research<br />

did manage to write my research report. requirement; in their senior year they have


several electives, so a lot of the time they<br />

project was on the assessment and treat-<br />

are away from Rockford. We always have a<br />

ment of depression in older adults in rural<br />

number of research projects, but not<br />

Illinois. I grew up on a farm in a small rural<br />

always a lot of students around. <strong>The</strong>refore,<br />

community in the Netherlands, and geriat-<br />

it was handy for us that Maastricht stu-<br />

ric medicine has always drawn my atten-<br />

dents could help us with the projects; and<br />

tion; therefore, this project was perfect for<br />

we helped them gain experience.<br />

me. Rural medicine gets special attention<br />

at the University of Illinois in Rockford.<br />

Lieke Vogels came in October 2007, for the<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a special programme for rural<br />

18 week research participation. It is impor-<br />

medical students, so it was the perfect<br />

tant to have 18 weeks; you need this time.<br />

location for this project.<br />

We did a project on what primary care doctors<br />

know about and how they treat<br />

Throughout this experience, I have realised<br />

depressions in older people. Ten years<br />

that management of geriatric depression<br />

before that, a colleague and I had done a<br />

survey of rural doctors in Illinois, to find<br />

out how they treated depression in older<br />

people. It would be useful to conduct a<br />

survey on that population 10 years later.<br />

Lieke and I are writing a paper now to<br />

publish her study findings. We have analysed<br />

the results and now we are writing a<br />

paper so we can submit it to a US peerreviewed<br />

journal.<br />

I think a strength of students coming to<br />

Rockford is that it is very easy for us to put<br />

them in contact with doctors and patients,<br />

so they can actually go out and collect<br />

their own data. At other universities the<br />

research might be more clinical; ours is<br />

clinical in a way, but also social and behavioural.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y actually get to know people,<br />

and they get to know how the healthcare<br />

system works and how it effects the people<br />

that are using that system.<br />

Michael Glasser | Associate Dean,<br />

Centre for Rural <strong>Health</strong> Professions,<br />

College of Medicine at Rockford,<br />

University of Illinois, USA<br />

Email: michaelg@uic.edu<br />

As a 6 th year Dutch medical student, I<br />

went all the way to Rockford, Illinois for<br />

my research participation. My research<br />

in rural areas in the US remains an area of<br />

concern, as there is poor access to mental<br />

healthcare. Although more than 20% of<br />

the US population lives in places defined<br />

as rural, only 9% of all physicians practice<br />

in these communities. Better recruitment<br />

of psychologists and counsellors in rural<br />

regions is needed to improve depression<br />

care. Furthermore, the results of the study<br />

strongly support integration of mental<br />

healthcare in primary care practices. This<br />

approach is quite similar to the change<br />

you see in the Netherlands; an increasing<br />

amount of family physicians share the<br />

office with psychologists.<br />

Finishing my research project was my main<br />

goal in Rockford, but another reason to<br />

choose for Rockford was the fact that I<br />

always wanted to experience the American<br />

way of life. And I certainly did! I shared my<br />

apartment with a medical student. This<br />

made it very easy to integrate with other<br />

medical students and local people. I was<br />

the only exchange student at the College<br />

of Medicine, so everybody was really interested<br />

and willing to help. All people I met<br />

have been very generous and I have made<br />

some precious friendships. I have even<br />

been a bridesmaid at a friend’s wedding!<br />

This made my stay in the US a wonderful<br />

experience.<br />

Ms. Lieke Vogels<br />

Lieke Vogels / Student, Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>,<br />

Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht<br />

University, the Netherlands<br />

Email: liekevogels@hotmail.com<br />

I think a<br />

strength of<br />

students<br />

coming to<br />

Rockford is<br />

that it is very<br />

easy for us to<br />

put them in<br />

contact with<br />

doctors and<br />

patients, so they<br />

can actually go<br />

out and collect<br />

their own data.<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

25


Member and organisational News<br />

Messages from the executive committee<br />

To learn more about the personal beliefs, motivation and goals of our EC Members, we have invited Ian Cameron to share his<br />

thoughts with us.<br />

EC Intelligence:<br />

Ian Cameron<br />

In April 2008 the Australian Government<br />

health systems, and at all levels including<br />

held a 2020 Summit. <strong>The</strong> planners invited<br />

policy makers, practitioners and health or-<br />

1000 people who were described as Aus-<br />

ganisations, as well as academics and com-<br />

tralia’s brightest and best, to spend an un-<br />

munity. I think that since the merger, we<br />

funded weekend discussing what Australia<br />

have not taken full advantage of the op-<br />

should look like in 2020, and what needed<br />

portunities offered by the inclusion of<br />

to be done to get there. Streams included<br />

TUFH, and we still have a chance to maxi-<br />

such areas as productivity, governance, so-<br />

mise these opportunities.<br />

cial inclusion, creativity, health, rural communities,<br />

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Is-<br />

Recently I was talking with a wise and<br />

lander peoples, security, and the economy.<br />

eminent doctor about rural health work-<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

I was honoured to be one of those selected<br />

to attend.<br />

In many ways it reminded me of a Network:<br />

TUFH Conference. <strong>The</strong>re were few plena-<br />

force. He had also been involved for many<br />

years in Aboriginal health and in general<br />

practice education. While we talked he<br />

asked me “where did we go wrong” And<br />

we have gone wrong. Our rural health<br />

Dr. Ian Cameron<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH is widely known, but<br />

we could be better at letting people know<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

ries, and those few addressed some of the<br />

bigger issues. Our groups focussed not on<br />

what was wrong, but what was needed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> thoughts were diverse and often ‘out<br />

of the square’. Like a Network: TUFH Conference,<br />

it had no defined ending, but left<br />

participants and the Government with a<br />

plethora of thoughts for the future. It was<br />

fun.<br />

One of the great strengths of <strong>The</strong> Network:<br />

TUFH has always been this inclusion and<br />

sharing of thoughts, without anyone pushing<br />

their thought as a single path to make<br />

the system work. <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH recognises<br />

and celebrates diversity. From its beginnings<br />

in academic-community partnership,<br />

it has acknowledged that health<br />

workforce throughout the world is small<br />

and declining. Yet our education and training<br />

effort and expertise are increasing. Reflecting<br />

on his question, I think it in many<br />

ways parallels the directions that are open<br />

in <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH. Our focus on education<br />

has helped to equip a potential health<br />

workforce for their future, but we sometimes<br />

have neglected the work environment<br />

they may go into. This is where I think<br />

a greater uptake of the TUFH elements will<br />

add immense value.<br />

<strong>For</strong> me the future of <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH<br />

combines more of the same actions with<br />

more concentration on health systems. <strong>The</strong><br />

conferences are marvellous; often the<br />

thought of the next one is what helps to<br />

how we do things. This particularly applies<br />

to future funders of Network: TUFH activities.<br />

I think that a short published strategic<br />

plan that includes what we do, who we<br />

do it with, how we do it and how it is funded<br />

would be of immense value in adding to<br />

our profile.<br />

All these strategies are framed in a context<br />

that it is the people involved who make<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH what it is. We need to<br />

continue to acknowledge the vision and<br />

leadership, the participation and work of<br />

all our people from Conference attendees<br />

to the Secretariat. We need to support the<br />

students and hopefully keep them within<br />

the Network: TUFH community as they<br />

graduate and move into their own work.<br />

changes will largely come from outside the<br />

keep me going. We need to add to that the<br />

And we need to ensure that the Network:<br />

health sector, but that we all have our role<br />

wider partnership theme. This has already<br />

TUFH community remains one that cares,<br />

to play and to share. However, <strong>The</strong> Net-<br />

been happening with closer ties to colle-<br />

shares, develops and is enjoyable.<br />

work: TUFH has for many years concentrat-<br />

giate organisations including Wonca, the<br />

ed on the education side of development.<br />

Wonca Rural Working Party and the Wonca<br />

Ian Cameron | Executive Committee<br />

Africa regional group. <strong>The</strong> recent co-signed<br />

Member; CEO NSW Rural Doctors Network<br />

<strong>The</strong> merging of <strong>The</strong> Network with TUFH<br />

editorial in the British Medical Journal on<br />

Email: icameron@nswrdn.com.au<br />

gave exciting possibilities to the new or-<br />

vertical health funding is a great example.<br />

ganisation in moving beyond an academic<br />

<strong>The</strong> ongoing relationship with GHETS is<br />

focus to being more inclusive of others in<br />

another.<br />

26


TASKFORCES<br />

15by2015:<br />

Quality <strong>Health</strong>care for All<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH is one of the organisations involved in the 15by2015<br />

campaign. <strong>The</strong> campaign has been officially launched with the publication<br />

of an editorial in the British Medical Journal on March 1, 2008 ( De<br />

Maeseneer et al., 2008. Funding for Primary <strong>Health</strong>care in Developing<br />

Countries. 336:518-519).<br />

Dr. Khalifa Elmusharaf was awarded with the 2007<br />

<strong>Tamas</strong> <strong>Fülöp</strong> <strong>Award</strong><br />

15by2015 is a campaign calling for all major global health donors to<br />

allocate 15% of all their grants towards strengthening the primary<br />

healthcare system of the country they are working in. <strong>The</strong> target date<br />

is the same as with the globally known and used eight millennium development<br />

goals: 2015. With 15by2015 we want to specifically target<br />

healthcare and make you and all influencing stakeholders aware of an<br />

adequate strategy to improve healthcare. Quality healthcare - accessible<br />

and affordable - is a right for all; most everybody agrees on this,<br />

but the way to reach this is not always clear.<br />

<strong>The</strong> positive news is that financial support to improve healthcare in<br />

developing countries has increased seriously in the last years, about<br />

26% between 1997 and 2002. However, the vast majority of this aid<br />

was allocated to disease specific projects (vertical programmes) rather<br />

than to broad-based investments (horizontal programmes) such as primary<br />

healthcare services. Vertical programmes improve healthcare, but<br />

only for small groups of people with specific diseases. Some people receive<br />

good care, others remain untreated because there are no doctors,<br />

nurses or medication available.<br />

Furthermore, salaries of healthcare providers working for donor-funded<br />

vertical programmes are often two to four times that of equally trained<br />

Government workers in primary healthcare. This induces an internal<br />

brain-drain (loss of well-trained people where they are most needed)<br />

where local healthcare workers move from their work in health centres<br />

and hospitals to the better paid projects of donor organisations.<br />

Primary healthcare cuts across diseases in a systemic way. Investing<br />

in improving the quality of primary healthcare (infrastructure, human<br />

resources and equipment) is a broad-based and sustainable investment<br />

that should be accessible and affordable for all. <strong>For</strong> example, if good<br />

primary healthcare were available in the 42 countries accounting for<br />

about 90% of child deaths world-wide, 63% of these deaths could<br />

be prevented. <strong>The</strong> most prevalent health care problems in developing<br />

countries are respiratory illnesses, diarrhoea and complications of labour<br />

and delivery. <strong>The</strong>se can and must be treated within the same primary<br />

healthcare framework that deals with diseases such as malaria,<br />

tuberculosis and AIDS.<br />

Please sign our petition in support of improving the primary healthcare<br />

around the world: www.15by2015.org<br />

Tribute to…<br />

At the occasion of the Network: TUFH’s 25 th anniversary, the<br />

Executive Committee installed the <strong>Tamas</strong> <strong>Fülöp</strong> <strong>Award</strong> (TFA).<br />

<strong>Tamas</strong> <strong>Fülöp</strong>, who was in a leadership role at WHO Headquarters<br />

in Geneva at the time, took the initiative to establish<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network in 1979.<br />

<strong>The</strong> TFA honours a person/organisation/institution/group<br />

for outstanding contributions to <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH. <strong>The</strong><br />

award consists, apart from a certificate, of an economy ticket<br />

to travel to a future Network: TUFH Conference (to be<br />

filled in within three years from the year of award), space in<br />

the Newsletter and a world-wide announcement through our<br />

hlt-net Alert.<br />

During the General Meeting in Kampala, Uganda in September<br />

2007 the 2 nd TFA was presented to a very honoured<br />

Dr. Khalifa Elmusharaf from Sudan. Dr. Elmusharaf,<br />

a 32-year old medical doctor, has been an active participant<br />

and contributor at the Network: TUFH Conferences; he was<br />

a member of the Poster Evaluation Committee; he was also<br />

national coordinator of Sudanese participants in Australia;<br />

in Vietnam he was a member of the Conference Evaluation<br />

Committee, and he won the Best Poster <strong>Award</strong>; in Belgium<br />

he organised and co-facilitated a workshop titled Practical<br />

skills for students and young health professional to setup<br />

community projects; he is an active member of Evaluation<br />

Committee of the Women and <strong>Health</strong> taskforce; he presented<br />

also several posters.<br />

Dr. Elmusharaf has been relevant to the advancement of<br />

health in his community, in different areas including medical<br />

education, medical students’ activities, health service<br />

delivery, health researches and community charity work. He<br />

established and led many students and medical organisations<br />

and conducted workshops and training courses concerning<br />

leadership developing programme. He organised<br />

and participated in more than 30 medical trips to rural areas<br />

of Sudan, which included medical students training, charity<br />

medical services, health education and promotion and small<br />

projects implementation, which was of grate value.<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

27


Member and organisational News<br />

TASKFORCES<br />

Mini-Grants Supporting<br />

Women and <strong>Health</strong> Learning Package<br />

Global <strong>Health</strong> through Education, Training<br />

shop for Promoting Women’s <strong>Health</strong> Learn-<br />

New Taskforce:<br />

and Service (GHETS) awarded in 2007 a<br />

ing for Malaysian <strong>Health</strong> Professional<br />

Social Accountability and<br />

total of $10,000 towards mini-grants (each<br />

Students scheduled for next year.<br />

Accreditation<br />

is no more than $3,000) to support the use<br />

<strong>The</strong> new taskforce is chaired by Robert Wool-<br />

of the Women and <strong>Health</strong> Learning Pack-<br />

In South Africa’s Gauteng province, Todd<br />

lard, Canada (woollard@familymed.ubc.ca),<br />

age (WHLP). Each year, the grant proposals<br />

Maja has recognised the need for health<br />

and Charles Boelen, France (boelen.charles@<br />

are reviewed by the Women and <strong>Health</strong><br />

education curricula to be developed among<br />

wanadoo.fr).<br />

Taskforce. In 2007, the taskforce chose<br />

youth care centres in order to address the<br />

four recipients who submitted innovative<br />

increasing number of youth engaging in<br />

Its aim is promotion of social accountability<br />

plans for approaching women’s health top-<br />

risky behaviours.<br />

principles and methods with aims:<br />

ics through a variety of different avenues:<br />

• to orient education, research and health<br />

By conducting workshops among health-<br />

service activities of educational institu-<br />

In Uganda, GHETS funded Sarah Kiguli to<br />

care providers and students serving as peer<br />

tions to better respond to people’s priority<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

increase knowledge regarding reproductive<br />

health among undergraduate medical students,<br />

who will in turn work with women in<br />

the surrounding areas. This project came<br />

about from Sarah Kiguli’s observations of<br />

educators from these health centres, Todd<br />

Maja will help to develop learning modules<br />

tailored to the specific health problems of<br />

local youth.<br />

Ultimately these modules, derived from<br />

health needs; and<br />

• to develop relevant evaluation and accreditation<br />

standards and processes.<br />

<strong>The</strong> taskforce objectives are:<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

the trend of pregnancy among many single<br />

female students during their medical training<br />

along with the lack of stand-alone services<br />

for women.<br />

Sarah Kiguli sees the need to promote preventive<br />

messages in order to decrease the<br />

risk of unwanted pregnancies and STI’s. As<br />

a result she plans to use a variety of media,<br />

such as workshops and talk shows, to increase<br />

reproductive health knowledge,<br />

while also directing skits and role-playing<br />

in order to empower young people with the<br />

communication skills for approaching these<br />

issues.<br />

Rogayah Ja’afar of Malaysia has identified<br />

a similar need to promote curricula<br />

the WHLP, will be implemented by staff at<br />

several different youth centres.<br />

Lastly, in Nigeria Godwin Aja aims to use<br />

church-based women support <strong>network</strong>s as<br />

a means for promoting the use of the<br />

WHLP. Churches provide opportunities for<br />

training non-professionals on behaviour<br />

change and promoting health among local<br />

communities.<br />

Godwin Aja will orchestrate a two-day<br />

workshop that will allow for discussion of<br />

many WHLP topics via interactive activities<br />

such as drama features, essays, storytelling,<br />

and poster presentation. Along with<br />

disseminating knowledge, GHETS is hopeful<br />

that this workshop will create a sense<br />

• to create awareness and interest for social<br />

accountability in universities and health<br />

professional schools at international level;<br />

• to organise educational activities related<br />

to the definition and measurement of<br />

social accountability;<br />

• to elaborate standards reflecting social<br />

accountability;<br />

• to suggest tools and mechanisms to<br />

assess social accountability;<br />

• to collect data on status and progress of<br />

social accountability in universities and<br />

health professional schools; and<br />

• to conduct experiments in using standards,<br />

assessment tools and mechanisms<br />

for the purpose of accreditation.<br />

surrounding women’s health at health pro-<br />

of partnership for increased awareness on<br />

fessional schools as well as NGOs.<br />

women’s health issues among churchbased<br />

<strong>network</strong>s as well as arm individuals<br />

After taking part in the drafting of a for-<br />

with the necessary skills for facilitating<br />

mal educational module on women’s<br />

further workshops in the future.<br />

health at a meeting several years ago, she<br />

hopes to incorporate the WHLP as a key<br />

Jessie Rothstein | Global <strong>Health</strong> through<br />

component of this curriculum and to ex-<br />

Education, Training and Service (GHETS),<br />

pand its scope to the national level. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

USA<br />

efforts will culminate in a National Work-<br />

Email: jdr@ghets.org<br />

28


Projects<br />

Related to Care for the Elderly<br />

Molly Eriki from Uganda (jajjashome@<br />

Akye plans to work with his colleagues in his<br />

mend that care of the elderly be part of the<br />

mildmay.or.ug) reported on an innovative<br />

family practice to find ways to provide home<br />

undergraduate medicine curriculum.<br />

programme in Uganda, in which grandpar-<br />

care for the older adults in their practices.<br />

ents are care givers of children with AIDS.<br />

This approach will also create learning op-<br />

Larry Chambers from Canada (lchamber@<br />

‘Clubs for Grandparents’ were set up in 14<br />

portunities for undergraduate medical stu-<br />

scohs.on.ca) outlined projects of the Elisa-<br />

of the 80 districts of Uganda. NGO funding<br />

dents.<br />

beth Bruyère Research Institute (EBRI). <strong>The</strong><br />

was used to hire volunteer coordinators who<br />

EBRI website provides brief overviews of its<br />

recruit volunteers identified by local health-<br />

Suman Gadicherla from India (suma-<br />

research programmes that cover care of the<br />

care centres and parish officials to run these<br />

namogh@gmail.com) reported on Indira<br />

elderly, including the cardiovascular health<br />

clubs. <strong>The</strong> clubs typically support 40 to 50<br />

Gandhi National Open University, School of<br />

awareness programme (www.chapprogram.<br />

grandparents each week.<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Sciences offering post graduate di-<br />

ca), palliative care, CanDRIVE (a research<br />

ploma courses, which is of one year duration,<br />

programme to improve clinical decision-mak-<br />

A number of activities are offered at the<br />

for medical graduates i.e. to those who have<br />

ing related to keeping older drivers driving),<br />

clubs, from skills training in care of children<br />

to poetry writing and healthcare. <strong>Health</strong>care<br />

sessions at the club are followed up with<br />

home visits by nurses, teachers, physicians,<br />

religious leaders and social workers. Students<br />

including medical nursing and social<br />

work students regularly have placements attached<br />

to the clubs. With the early success<br />

of these clubs, Molly pointed out that this<br />

programme should be offered in the other<br />

66 districts in Uganda.<br />

Akye Essuman from Ghana (akyessuman@<br />

yahoo.com) outlined his interest in home<br />

care for older adults in his practice and his<br />

desire to see care of the elderly be a learning<br />

goal for medical students in his medical<br />

school.<br />

At present, the students may be exposed<br />

to care of the elderly in their clerkship, and<br />

there is an opportunity in the family medicine<br />

residency programme for residents to<br />

completed their MBBS and are practicing<br />

medicine. This course is offered in distance<br />

education mode and the school is one of<br />

the study centres where the enrolled participants<br />

come for contact programmes, about<br />

four spells of one week each.<br />

In her teaching hospital, a geriatrics clinic is<br />

offered one day of each week. In September<br />

2007, an outreach centre/clinic for older<br />

adult outpatients was offered and medical<br />

students (house surgeons/interns) participate<br />

in these clinics. <strong>The</strong> plan is to expand<br />

these clinics to include health promotion<br />

and disease prevention.<br />

Joan Basigira from Uganda (registrar@<br />

med.mak.ac.ug) had observed that care of<br />

the elderly is not a topic presently covered in<br />

the undergraduate curriculum of the Makere<br />

Medical School. Medical students now must<br />

participate in the Community-Based Education<br />

Service (CBES) component of their pro-<br />

primary care, and TAFETA (keeping people<br />

independent in a friendly home environment<br />

through the use of technology). Larry reported<br />

that the EBRI is producing and evaluating<br />

on-line e-learning resources that focus on<br />

interprofessional patient-centred collaborative<br />

care and palliative care through the humanities.<br />

<strong>The</strong> EBRI is a member of the newly<br />

established Ontario Seniors <strong>Health</strong> Research<br />

Transfer Network (SHRTN)(www.shrtn.on.ca).<br />

Through the support of librarians, knowledge<br />

brokers and the health and aging research<br />

institutes/centres in Ontario, caregivers of<br />

older adults participate in SHRTN local implementation<br />

teams, SHRTN communities of<br />

practice, the SHRTN annual assembly to exchange<br />

ideas, connect people, and promote<br />

use and production of research.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH taskforce on Elderly Care<br />

and the Network: TUFH taskforce on Interprofessional<br />

Education will jointly plan and<br />

run a session at the next Network: TUFH<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

focus on geriatrics.<br />

gramme, where they conduct a community<br />

Conference in Colombia in 2008. Elderly<br />

environmental scan focusing on prevention<br />

Care taskforce members are invited to partic-<br />

<strong>The</strong> Help Age Ghana long-term care home<br />

and health promotion. Some exposure to<br />

ipate in planning the session by contacting<br />

and a few veteran homes are the only facili-<br />

care of the elderly may arise but this is not<br />

Larry Chambers and Dawn <strong>For</strong>man (dawn.<br />

ties, and therefore virtually all older adults<br />

emphasized by the CBES. Students also are<br />

forman@btinternet.com) (leader of the task-<br />

must stay at home when they become frail<br />

involved in the palliative care hospice in<br />

force on Interprofessional Education).<br />

and more dependent. As more and more city<br />

Kampala that includes outreach home visits.<br />

dwellers spend time at work, they have less<br />

<strong>The</strong> School of Medicine is presently conduct-<br />

Larry Chambers | Taskforce Care for the<br />

time to care for their homebound parents<br />

ing a review of the undergraduate medicine<br />

Elderly<br />

and/or grandparents.<br />

curriculum. As Registrar, Joan will recom-<br />

Email: lchamber@scohs.on.ca<br />

29


Member and organisational News<br />

REPRESENTED AT INTERNATIONAL MEETINGS/CONFERENCES<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

30<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH is being represented at meetings and conferences all over the<br />

world. Here is a report of one of our representatives.<br />

Frontline Medicine:<br />

From Natural Disasters to Daily Care<br />

WONCA 8 th International Rural <strong>Health</strong><br />

Conference, Nigeria, February 2008<br />

Three hundred members attended - the majority<br />

from Nigeria - dynamic and ebullient<br />

and welcoming. Sadly, rumours about security<br />

deterred visitors from outside. But Calabar<br />

appeared well ordered, organisers ensured<br />

security and there was no sense of<br />

threat. <strong>The</strong> Organising Committee was<br />

chaired by Ndifreke Udonwa and the Scientific<br />

Committee by Victor Inem. <strong>The</strong>y and<br />

their teams of workers overcame all challenges.<br />

Mutually Supportive Relationship<br />

WONCA and <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH are seeking<br />

a mutually supportive relationship. This<br />

partnership was discussed by the Rural<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Working Party, chaired by Ian Couper<br />

from Witwatersrand University, South Africa.<br />

I was asked to represent <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH.<br />

<strong>The</strong> organisations have different aims but<br />

share common ground in rural communitybased<br />

medical education and commitments<br />

to primary care. <strong>The</strong>y are jointly seeking discussion<br />

at the World <strong>Health</strong> Assembly for:<br />

• the HARP initiative (<strong>Health</strong> for all Rural<br />

People), and<br />

• the 15by2015 initiative to ensure by the<br />

year 2015 that 15% of vertical programme<br />

funding be allocated to strengthening integrated<br />

local primary care systems.<br />

WONCA proposed to <strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH that<br />

the relationship be developed as follows:<br />

• Consultation will continue at the<br />

Northern Ontario School of Medicine<br />

International Conference: Community;<br />

Medical Education in the North (ICE-<br />

MEN) in Sudbury Ontario, June 8 to 14,<br />

2008: http://normedsps.lakeheadu.ca/<br />

icemen/default.aspx<br />

• WONCA Rural <strong>Health</strong> members will<br />

attend the Network: TUFH Conference in<br />

Colombia for further discussion in<br />

September: www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org/<br />

conference<br />

• A joint workshop at the WONCA Rural<br />

<strong>Health</strong> World Conference in Crete in<br />

2009 (www.ruralwonca2009.org) will<br />

plan for a joint full meeting in 2011.<br />

Remembrance<br />

<strong>The</strong> conference opening ceremony and celebratory<br />

dinner were marked by the remembrance<br />

of the contribution to general practice<br />

of two historic figures in the early<br />

development of general practice in Nigeria.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first was S.IE. Emoke, of this very region,<br />

one of the first Nigerian trained practitioners.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second was C. Andrew Pearson of<br />

the Wesley Guild Mission hospital, who was<br />

a leader in establishing of this training.<br />

Pearson’s son Bryon presented the album of<br />

his fathers’ photographic record of those<br />

early beginnings, to remain permanently in<br />

Nigeria. He reminded me I had spoken about<br />

McMaster at the 1979 launching conference.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first day of the Calabar conference<br />

was rich with seminars, training sessions<br />

and presentations on the main theme and<br />

on wide ranging topics. <strong>The</strong> day closed with<br />

an outdoor evening reception at University<br />

of Calabar Teaching Hospital.<br />

Okoyong<br />

On the second day we were bussed to the<br />

rural community of Okoyong. Here my keynote<br />

address, Lessons from Community-Based<br />

Education in Five Continents, was held in<br />

brilliant sunshine, the PowerPoint invisible.<br />

Pictures were in words and action. Fifteen<br />

graduates of Ilorin were in the audience.<br />

Three I had taught 30 years ago! Discussion<br />

to and fro became part of the talk, verifying<br />

my account. Who needs technology We<br />

were greeted by the Paramount Chief, an<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH is being represented<br />

at meetings and conferences all over the<br />

world:<br />

• Geneva <strong>Health</strong> <strong>For</strong>um 2008, May<br />

2008, Switzerland. Represented by Jan<br />

de Maeseneer.<br />

• Global <strong>For</strong>um on Human Resources for<br />

<strong>Health</strong>, March 2008, Uganda.<br />

Represented by Sarah Kiguli.<br />

• WONCA 8 th International Rural <strong>Health</strong><br />

Conference, February 2008, Nigeria.<br />

Represented by John Hamilton.<br />

• Bellagio Conference on Expanding<br />

Frontiers in Medical Education,<br />

September 2008. Represented by<br />

Abraham Joseph.<br />

• Global <strong>Health</strong> Council’s 35 th Annual<br />

International Conference, May 2008,<br />

USA. Represented by Jan de Maeseneer<br />

and Pertti Kekki.<br />

anaesthetist. <strong>The</strong>n moved to the old home of<br />

Mary Slessor, an early missionary, much revered<br />

in this area to which she brought Presbyterian<br />

ministry, healthcare and protection<br />

for newborn twins who were believed to be<br />

evil. And then we got down to serious exchange<br />

with the community at the village<br />

meeting house, with speeches, music, singing<br />

and dancing. <strong>The</strong> officers of the Rural<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Working Party and Chris van Weel<br />

(President of WONCA) were robed and inducted<br />

as Chiefs, followed by more singing<br />

and dancing.<br />

<strong>The</strong> working party returned the compliments<br />

of the elders by proposing that a fund be<br />

raised to repair and update the clinic. A cultural<br />

evening in Calabar and a thoughtful<br />

visit to the Museum of Slavery closed the<br />

day.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH should look forward to<br />

working with WONCA Rural <strong>Health</strong>.<br />

John Hamilton | Professor Emeritus,<br />

Department of Medicine and Public<br />

<strong>Health</strong>, Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>, <strong>The</strong> University<br />

of Newcastle, Australia<br />

Email: jha06187@bigpond.net.au


ABOUT OUR MEMBERS<br />

A Passion<br />

for...<br />

<strong>The</strong> passion of Paul Akmajian,<br />

Marketing and Outreach Officer,<br />

School of Medicine, University of<br />

New Mexico, USA:<br />

A famous Argentine teacher of mine once<br />

said, “You don’t find the tango. <strong>The</strong> tango<br />

finds you.” Well, the tango found me and it<br />

became a major passion of mine.<br />

It all began rather innocently in 1998,<br />

when my wife and I decided to try to get<br />

out of the house more and we started taking<br />

some swing dance lessons. <strong>The</strong>y were<br />

quite fun, and one day through a casual<br />

conversation with a friend, the idea of<br />

branching out and trying tango lessons<br />

came up. My initial reaction was “Tango!”.<br />

It seemed very old fashioned and exotic….<br />

I knew virtually nothing about it and questioned<br />

whether or where we would ever get<br />

the chance to dance it outside of classes.<br />

Nevertheless, we signed up for a six-week<br />

class series, and my amazing tango journey<br />

began.<br />

At first, as we struggled through those<br />

early classes, it was maddening and frustrating.<br />

This was social, couple dance requiring<br />

that I lead every step. Many times<br />

I decided that this was it; I was quitting.<br />

I just was not going to get it. Yet, something<br />

kept me coming back… Perhaps the<br />

sweet, sad, nostalgic sounding music, the<br />

social interaction, the wonderful feeling of<br />

embracing your partner and moving around<br />

the floor, or just simply moving your body<br />

to music. Little by little, with time, I gained<br />

confidence and finally reached a point (after<br />

more than a year!) to ‘think’ less and<br />

‘feel’ more. As the vocabulary of the dance<br />

became part of my body memory, I had<br />

fewer tango ‘crises’ and I was able to relax<br />

and enjoy it more.<br />

Little did I know then that this was just<br />

barely the beginning, and that it would<br />

take years and many miles more on the<br />

‘You don’t find the tango. <strong>The</strong> tango finds you.’<br />

dance floor to get even close to mastering likely Afro-Argentines and Afro-Uruguayans<br />

who originally came over as slaves.<br />

the dance. Nor did I fully realise then how<br />

it would change me and how far it would <strong>The</strong>y brought with them African rhythms<br />

take us, how many wonderful people we such as the candombe, and later, via Cuba,<br />

would meet and wonderful times we would the habanera. <strong>The</strong>se two rhythms form the<br />

have.<br />

earliest origins of the milonga; a dance<br />

predecessor of the tango.<br />

So exactly what is it about the tango that<br />

hooks people How is it that someone As the century progressed, immigrant<br />

like me, who had never done any couple dockworkers from Italy, Germany and elsewhere<br />

in Europe arrived in Argentina in<br />

dancing per se and never even thought of<br />

myself as a good dancer, became addicted great numbers. Living in the poorer barrios<br />

to and adept at a dance so intricate and (neighbourhoods), they brought their own<br />

complex as the Argentine Tango - that now music and instruments, and through mixing<br />

with the residents of the nearby black<br />

I am even teaching it to others<br />

barrios, the tango was born.<br />

<strong>The</strong> answer is complex and mysterious, but<br />

I think the best explanation I can give is It is said that to become an expert at<br />

that it combines so many things I love into something (anything) requires doing it for<br />

one activity: nice music, hugs, a bit of theatricality<br />

and spontaneity with a physical over my ten-year tango journey, I can say<br />

ten years or 10,000 hours. Looking back<br />

challenge. Combined with that you have a that I have probably become an expert,<br />

unique opportunity to connect deeply - to but I also know how much more I still have<br />

become one - with another human being to learn. It is difficult now to conceive of<br />

for the three minutes of a song.<br />

even a week going by without dancing two<br />

or three times. Tango has taken me to unexpected<br />

places, and in the process I have<br />

Argentine Tango itself has a fascinating<br />

history, going back perhaps as far as 150 made lots of friends and become part of a<br />

years, with the form we are familiar with <strong>network</strong> of people all over the world who<br />

evolving in Argentina and Uruguay just before<br />

the beginning of the 20 th century. <strong>The</strong> I have heard there is some good tango in<br />

share my passion…and speaking of that,<br />

very first musicians and dancers were most Bogotá!<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8 N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

31


Member and organisational News<br />

ABOUT OUR MEMBERS<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network<br />

towards unity for health<br />

J U L Y 2 0 0 8<br />

Interesting Internet Sites<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: TUFH Interactive - Recommended Internet sites<br />

www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org/publications_resources/interactive.asp<br />

<strong>The</strong> Higher Education Academy Subject Centre for Medicine, Dentistry and Veterinary<br />

Medicine<br />

www.medev.ac.uk<br />

International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, European affiliatess<br />

www.ippnw-europe.org<br />

American Indians and Alaska Natives in <strong>Health</strong> Careers<br />

http://aianhealthcareers.org<br />

International conference in UK: <strong>The</strong> Future of Primary <strong>Health</strong>care in Europe<br />

www.futureofprimarycare.com/opt=0<br />

<strong>The</strong> International Council of Nurses (ICN) calls the world’s attention to the increasing<br />

violence against women, particularly in areas of conflict<br />

www.icn.ch/waa_UNambassadors.htm<br />

Primafamed; An institutional <strong>network</strong> for the development of family medicine and<br />

primary healthcare in Africa<br />

www.primafamed.ugent.be/index.html<br />

Newsletter Volume 27 | no. 1 | July 2008<br />

ISSN 1571-9308<br />

Editors: Marion Stijnen and Pauline Vluggen<br />

Language editor: Sandra McCollum<br />

<strong>The</strong> Network: <strong>Towards</strong> <strong>Unity</strong> for <strong>Health</strong><br />

Publications<br />

P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht<br />

<strong>The</strong> Netherlands<br />

Tel: 31-43-3885633, Fax: 31-43-3885639<br />

Email: secretariat@<strong>network</strong>.unimaas.nl<br />

www.the-<strong>network</strong>tufh.org<br />

Lay-out: Graphic Design Agency Emilio Perez<br />

Print: Drukkerij Gijsemberg<br />

N E W S L E T T E R N U M B E R 0 1 | V O L U M E 2 7<br />

32<br />

Moving On:<br />

Changes in Institutional Leadership<br />

<strong>The</strong> Secretariat received information about changes in leadership with the following Network:<br />

TUFH members. We have listed the names of the former and new (Vice-) Deans/<br />

Directors for you:<br />

• Dr. Hernando Matiz Camacho, Escuela Colombiana de Medicina, Universidad El Bosque,<br />

Bogotá, Colombia has been replaced by Dr. Miguel Ruiz Rubiano, medicina@unbosque.<br />

edu.co<br />

• Dr. Jayaprakash Muliyil, Christian Medical College and Hospital, Bagayam, Vellore,<br />

India has been replaced by Dr. Anand Job, prince@cmcvellore.ac.in<br />

• Dr. Bernard Groosjohan, Faculty of Medicine, Catholic University of Mozambique, Beira,<br />

Mozambique has been replaced by Dr. Josefo Ferro, josefoferro@yahoo.com.br<br />

• Dr. Mayuree Vasinanukorn, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Songkhla,<br />

Thailand has been replaced by Dr. Somchai Suntornlohanakul, somchai.su@psu.ac.th<br />

• Prof. Michael Olanrewaju Padonu - mopadonu@yahoo.co.uk - has been appointed to<br />

the post of Provost of the College of <strong>Health</strong> Sciences, Igbinedion University, Nigeria<br />

It is with pleasure that we would like to inform you that the following Full Members<br />

have been awarded (a continuation of their) Full Membership:<br />

Up to 2102:<br />

Faculty of <strong>Health</strong>, <strong>The</strong> University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia.<br />

Silver Full Member<br />

Up to 2013:<br />

School of Medicine, Moi University, Eldoret, Kenya.<br />

Silver Full Member<br />

New Members<br />

Full Members<br />

• School of Medicine and <strong>Health</strong> Sciences,<br />

University for Development Studies, Tamale,<br />

Ghana<br />

• Faculty of Medicine, University of Medical<br />

Sciences & Technology, Khartoum, Sudan<br />

Associate Members<br />

• Steirische Akademie für Allgemeinmedizin,<br />

Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria<br />

• <strong>Health</strong> Training Institute, Alli Causai<br />

Foundation, Ambato, Ecuador<br />

Individual Members<br />

• Dr. Tayyab Hassan, Hospital University<br />

Science Malaysia, Kota Bharu, Kubang<br />

Kerian, Malaysia<br />

• Drs. Klaas Bart de Raad, Máxima Medical<br />

Centre Eindhoven, Eindhoven, the Netherlands<br />

• Ms. Ntsakisi Eustacia Furumele, Faculty of<br />

<strong>Health</strong> Sciences, University of Limpopo,<br />

Polokwane, Republic of South Africa<br />

• Ms. Julie Sierra, Department of Internal<br />

Medicine, University of New Mexico,<br />

Albuquerque, NM, USA

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