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Health SA Gesondheid (Online)

On-line version ISSN 2071-9736
Print version ISSN 1025-9848

Abstract

REARDON, Candice; ENIGBOKAN, Oluwatobi  and  GEORGE, Gavin. British doctors' experiences of working in rural South Africa: The London GP Out of Programme Experience. Health SA Gesondheid (Online) [online]. 2014, vol.19, n.1, pp.01-10. ISSN 2071-9736.  http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/hsag.v19i1.789.

BACKGROUND: A paucity of research exists that has examined temporary placements of foreign health professionals in South Africa (SA) as a possible strategy for addressing health worker shortages. The Out of Programme Experience (OOPE) initiative, run by the London GP Deanery, aims to provide a sustainable inflow of British, trainee GP doctors into rural public health facilities in SA. OBJECTIVES: The present study explored the experiences of these British doctors working in rural hospitals in SA as part of their OOPE. The reasons and motivations underlying their decision to come to SA were also examined. METHODS: In-depth interviews were conducted with fifteen British doctors who were currently working, or had worked in the past, as part of OOPE in rural health facilities in SA. Interviewswere transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: The first theme that surfaced from the interviews was that the most common reasons underlying these doctors' motivations for coming to SA related to: the type of diseases and advanced pathologies that they would encounter; the challenge and opportunity for professional growth; and the difference in work environment that would confer on them I greater responsibility and autonomy, compared to working in similar positions in the British National Health Service. The second theme, central to the participants' narratives, was the accelerated period of learning that they experienced whilst in SA. Exposure to new and unfamiliar medical cases, a greater level of autonomy and decision-making authority, and resource shortages forced greater reliance on their clinical skills and judgment, whichcontributed to their professional development. CONCLUSION: The doctors' believed the OOPE enhanced their clinical skills and competencies. The findings provide some evidence that attests to the OOPE's potential to benefit both host facilities and the participating foreign doctors. The findings of the study have practicalimplications for the further development of programmes to fill vacant posts for health workers in rural South African hospitals.

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