Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1637
Title: Potential for the specialty of Family Medicine in Botswana: a discussion paper
Authors: Parsons, Luise
Rijken, Taatske
Mbuka, Deogratias O.
Nkomazana, Oathokwa
Keywords: Family medicine
Patient based care
Primary care
Botswana
Sub-Saharan Africa
Issue Date: 31-Oct-2012
Publisher: AOSIS; http://www.aosis.co.za/publishing
Citation: Parsons, L. et al (2012) Potential for the specialty of Family Medicine in Botswana: a discussion paper, African Journal of Primary Health Care and Family Medicine, Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 1-6
Abstract: Family Medicine is developing rapidly as a medical and academic specialty in sub-Saharan Africa. The multifactorial policy drivers are not well described, but include population health needs, the World Health Organisation’s initiative1 to re-energise primary care in their 2008 report, failure of hospital services and even vertical programmes to cope with the continuing HIV epidemic in many sub-Saharan countries in Africa, and a growing middle class which expects more and better quality from primary care.2,3 These are but a few reasons why Primary Health Care and Family Medicine are enjoying a resurgence o interest, investment and recruitment. Botswana is one of the latest countries in sub-Sahara Africa to open a School of Medicine (2009) and establish an Academic Department of Family Medicine (2010) to offer undergraduate and postgraduate training. The aim is to produce appropriately skilled generalist doctors who can function within and lead primary care to transform quality and access to health care. The curriculum is based on the regional definition of Family Medicine in an African context, articulated in the 2010 Statement of Consensus on Family Medicine in Africa.4,5 However, the debate has already begun within Botswana about whether this definition and our training programme are too Euro-centric and academic.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1637
ISSN: 2071-2928
Appears in Collections:Research articles (School of Medicine)

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