13 research outputs found

    Mastering your Fellowship

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    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written examination, Part A of the FCFP(SA) examination. The series aims to help Family Medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online.Keywords: FCFP(SA) examination, Family Medicine registrar

    Mastering your Fellowship

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    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written examination, Part A of the FCFP(SA) examination. The series aims to help Family Medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online.Keywords: FCFP(SA) examination, Family Medicine registrar

    Mastering your fellowship

    Get PDF
    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written examination, Part A of the FCFP(SA) examination. The series aims to help Family Medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online.Keywords: FCFP(SA) examination, Family Medicine registrar

    Mastering your Fellowship

    Get PDF
    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written examination, Part A of the FCFP(SA) examination. The series aims to help Family Medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online.Keywords: FCFP(SA) examination, Family Medicine registrar

    Mastering your Fellowship

    Get PDF
    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written examination, Part A  of the FCFP(SA) examination. The series aims to help Family Medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online.Keywords: FCFP(SA) examination, Family Medicine registrar

    Cervical cancer screening in a population of black South African women with high HIV prevalence : a cross-sectional study

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    DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Our ethics agreement with participants was that the data would only be accessible to the study team due to the sensitive information contained in the data; hence, it would compromise the HREC ethical standards to allow the data to be publicly available in a public repository, within the manuscript itself or uploaded as supplementary information. We are happy to share the data, or parts of the data, on a case-by case basis.Cervical cancer is largely preventable through early detection, but screening uptake remains low among black women in South Africa. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and factors associated with cervical cancer screening in the past 10 years among black African women in primary health care (PHC) clinics, in Gauteng Province, South Africa. This was a cross-sectional study involving 672 consecutively recruited black women at cervical cancer screening programs in PHC clinics between 2017 and 2020. An interviewer-administered questionnaire covered socio-demographics, HIV status, sexual history, cervical cancer risk factors knowledge, and screening behaviours in the past 10 years. The mean age of participants was 38 years. More than half (63%) were aged 30–49 years. Most completed high school education (75%), were unemployed (61%), single (60%), and HIV positive (48%). Only 285 (42.4%) of participants reported screening for cervical cancer in the past 10 years. Of participants that reported receiving information on screening, 27.6% (n = 176) and 13.97% (n = 89) did so from healthcare facilities and community platforms respectively. Participants aged 30 years or more were more likely to report for cervical cancer screening as compared to other categories in the past 10 years. The study found low cervical cancer screening prevalence. This calls for health education campaigns and prevention strategies that would target individual patients’ contexts and stages of behavioral change. Such strategies must also consider socio-demographic and clinical correlates of cervical cancer screening and promote better integration into PHC services in South Africa.The National Research Foundation and the Project SHPC 000 fund of the Department of Family medicine, University of the Witwatersrand.https://journals.plos.org/globalpublichealtham2023Family MedicineSchool of Health Systems and Public Health (SHSPH

    Tobacco use among a population of women attending cervical cancer screening programs in primary health care clinics in South Africa : a cross-sectional study

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    TABLES :TABLE 1: characteristics of women (N=749) attending pap smears at primary health care clinics in Gauteng Province, South Africa (September 2018-September 2019). TABLE 2: tobacco use characteristics of women (N=749) attending pap smears in primary health care clinics in Gauteng Province, South Africa (September 2018-September 2019). TABLE 3: factors associated with ever tobacco use among women attending pap smears at primary health care facilities in Gauteng Province (September 2018-September 2019). TABLE 4: factors associated with current tobacco use among women attending pap smears at primary health care facilities in Gauteng Province (September 2018-September 2019).INTRODUCTION : we determined the prevalence, patterns and factors associated with tobacco use among women presenting for cervical cancer screening in primary health care clinics in Gauteng province, South Africa. METHODS : this study utilized data from an ongoing cross-sectional study commenced in September 2018, in which 749 participants had responded to an interviewer-administered semi-structured questionnaire on socio-demographics, HIV status, tobacco use, family planning methods, sexual and cervical cancer screening behaviours. Data were entered into the web-based research electronic data capture (REDCap). We performed descriptive data analysis and included multivariate logistic regression. We considered a p-value < 0.05 statistically significant. RESULTS : participants´ median age was 38 years (interquartile range: 31-38) with 43.9% (328) reporting being HIV-positive. The prevalence of ever and current tobacco use were 24.3% (182/749) and 17.1% (128/749) respectively. In multivariable logistic regression, participants who self-identified as racial ethnicity other than Black African and those who were HIV positive and not on antiretroviral treatment, had increased odds of reporting current tobacco use ((adjusted odds ratio (AOR)= 5.6, 95% CI: 3.2-9.8) and (AOR= 8.2, 95% CI: 2.0-34.1) respectively). CONCLUSION : current tobacco use is common among women attending cervical cancer screening programs in primary health care clinics in Gauteng Province. Furthermore, study findings suggest the need to integrate tobacco cessation treatments into women´s health and HIV treatment programs.Department of Family Medicine and Primary Care Project FHP 000 and National Research Foundation.http://www.panafrican-med-journal.comam2023Family Medicin

    What do medical students and their clinical preceptors understand by primary health care in South Africa? A qualitative study

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    Abstract Background The definition of Primary Health Care (PHC) issued by the World Health Organisation in 1978 indicated that essential health care should be made accessible to individuals and their communities close to where they live and work. In 1992 Starfield articulated the four pillars of PHC: the patient’s first contact with healthcare, comprehensive care, coordinated care and continuous care. Using this literature guidance, this study sought to explore what undergraduate medical students and their clinical preceptors understood by PHC in four South African medical schools. Methods A qualitative study using the phenomenological design was conducted among undergraduate medical students and their clinical preceptors. The setting was four medical schools in South Africa (Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University, Walter Sisulu University and the University of KwaZulu-Natal and the Witwatersrand University). A total of 27 in-depth interviews were conducted among the clinical preceptors and 16 focus group discussions among the students who were in their clinical years of training (MBChB 4–6). Interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim, followed by thematic data analysis using the MAXQDA 2020 (Analytics Pro) software. Results Four themes were identified in which there were similarities between the students and their preceptors regarding their understanding of PHC: (1) PHC as the patient’s first contact with the healthcare system; (2) comprehensive care; (3) coordination of care and (4) continuity of care. A further two themes were identified in which these two groups were not of similar understanding: (5) PHC as a level or an approach to healthcare and (6) the role of specialist clinical preceptors in PHC. Conclusions Medical students and their clinical preceptors displayed an understanding of PHC in line with four pillars articulated by Starfield and the WHO definition of PHC. However, there remains areas of divergence, on which the medical schools should follow the guidance provided by the WHO and Starfield for a holistic understanding of PHC

    Mastering your fellowship (Online)

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    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written Final Part A of the FCFP (SA) examination. The series is aimed at helping family medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online

    Mastering your fellowship (Online)

    No full text
    The series, “Mastering your Fellowship”, provides examples of the question format encountered in the written Final Part A of the FCFP (SA) examination. The series is aimed at helping family medicine registrars prepare for this examination. Model answers are available online
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