African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment

Background: For many medical and allied health students from African countries, the opportunity to undertake a global health elective abroad is unaffordable or inaccessible. Therefore, an imbalance has emerged where many African institutions host students from developed countries but their own stude...

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Main Authors: Faith Nawagi, MIPH, Anna M Iacone, MSc, Danielle Tinder, MSc, Justin Seeling, MSc, Eunice Kamami, BSc, Amanda Sit, BSc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-03-01
Series:The Lancet Global Health
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214109X19301135
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spelling doaj-3aa5202b84364a24b7858f1bf74ab1d82020-11-25T01:55:56ZengElsevierThe Lancet Global Health2214-109X2019-03-017S28African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessmentFaith Nawagi, MIPH0Anna M Iacone, MSc1Danielle Tinder, MSc2Justin Seeling, MSc3Eunice Kamami, BSc4Amanda Sit, BSc5GEMx Africa service of ECFMG, Kampala, Uganda; Correspondence to: Ms Faith Nawagi, GEMx Africa service of ECFMG, ACHEST, Plot 13B, John Babiha Road, Acacia Avenue, Kampala, UgandaEducational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, Philadelphia, PA, USAEducational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, Philadelphia, PA, USAEducational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, Philadelphia, PA, USAEducational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, Philadelphia, PA, USAEducational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, Philadelphia, PA, USABackground: For many medical and allied health students from African countries, the opportunity to undertake a global health elective abroad is unaffordable or inaccessible. Therefore, an imbalance has emerged where many African institutions host students from developed countries but their own students rarely go on electives in developed countries. Global Educational Exchange in the Medical and Health professions (GEMx), a service programme of the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) partnered with the African Forum for Research in Health (AFREhealth) to implement a south-to-south student exchange pilot through intra-institutional partnerships. The aim was to provide affordable global-health learning opportunities to African students. Methods: 13 medical and nursing institutions in eight African countries participated in the AFREhealth pilot. Institutions entered into a multilateral agreement. The GEMx web-based system was used to centralise elective placements where students gained access to opportunities and applied online. Host institutions waived their administrative fees and provided a manager to support incoming students. ECFMG hired a contractor to do partnership development and work with students and leaders at participating institutions. ECFMG GEMx provided student mini-grants to cover travel, accommodation, and living expenses. We used SurveyMonkey to collect feedback from students, institutions, and AFREhealth leadership and to run descriptive analysis. Findings: Between April, 2017, and June, 2018, GEMx facilitated 48 student exchanges in medicine, nursing, and pharmacy in Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. 20 students (42%) reported that they had not previously gone on an elective exchange in another country and that this opportunity would not have been possible without GEMx. The most common learning experiences reported by institutions were that students: learned about and compared different health systems; improved clinical skills and gained knowledge that is applicable back home; increased confidence; developed professional networks; and managed and cared for patients who differed from those in their previous educational experience. These findings correlated with feedback collected from students. Interpretation: Translation and implementation for impact in global health requires models that provide opportunities for global exposure to various health-care settings. With little global exposure for African medical and allied health professional training students, the south-to-south model provides a suitable and cost-effective platform to address the gap. Outcomes from the pilot showed a strong commitment from intra-institutional partners within AFREhealth to the south-to-south model. Although ECFMG GEMx funding made student exchanges possible for the AFREhealth student exchange pilot, additional funding contributions are needed to expand the south-to-south student exchange programme. Funding: ECFMG Challenge Grant.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214109X19301135
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Faith Nawagi, MIPH
Anna M Iacone, MSc
Danielle Tinder, MSc
Justin Seeling, MSc
Eunice Kamami, BSc
Amanda Sit, BSc
spellingShingle Faith Nawagi, MIPH
Anna M Iacone, MSc
Danielle Tinder, MSc
Justin Seeling, MSc
Eunice Kamami, BSc
Amanda Sit, BSc
African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
The Lancet Global Health
author_facet Faith Nawagi, MIPH
Anna M Iacone, MSc
Danielle Tinder, MSc
Justin Seeling, MSc
Eunice Kamami, BSc
Amanda Sit, BSc
author_sort Faith Nawagi, MIPH
title African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
title_short African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
title_full African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
title_fullStr African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
title_full_unstemmed African Forum for Research in health (AFREhealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
title_sort african forum for research in health (afrehealth) student exchange pilot: an impact assessment
publisher Elsevier
series The Lancet Global Health
issn 2214-109X
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Background: For many medical and allied health students from African countries, the opportunity to undertake a global health elective abroad is unaffordable or inaccessible. Therefore, an imbalance has emerged where many African institutions host students from developed countries but their own students rarely go on electives in developed countries. Global Educational Exchange in the Medical and Health professions (GEMx), a service programme of the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) partnered with the African Forum for Research in Health (AFREhealth) to implement a south-to-south student exchange pilot through intra-institutional partnerships. The aim was to provide affordable global-health learning opportunities to African students. Methods: 13 medical and nursing institutions in eight African countries participated in the AFREhealth pilot. Institutions entered into a multilateral agreement. The GEMx web-based system was used to centralise elective placements where students gained access to opportunities and applied online. Host institutions waived their administrative fees and provided a manager to support incoming students. ECFMG hired a contractor to do partnership development and work with students and leaders at participating institutions. ECFMG GEMx provided student mini-grants to cover travel, accommodation, and living expenses. We used SurveyMonkey to collect feedback from students, institutions, and AFREhealth leadership and to run descriptive analysis. Findings: Between April, 2017, and June, 2018, GEMx facilitated 48 student exchanges in medicine, nursing, and pharmacy in Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. 20 students (42%) reported that they had not previously gone on an elective exchange in another country and that this opportunity would not have been possible without GEMx. The most common learning experiences reported by institutions were that students: learned about and compared different health systems; improved clinical skills and gained knowledge that is applicable back home; increased confidence; developed professional networks; and managed and cared for patients who differed from those in their previous educational experience. These findings correlated with feedback collected from students. Interpretation: Translation and implementation for impact in global health requires models that provide opportunities for global exposure to various health-care settings. With little global exposure for African medical and allied health professional training students, the south-to-south model provides a suitable and cost-effective platform to address the gap. Outcomes from the pilot showed a strong commitment from intra-institutional partners within AFREhealth to the south-to-south model. Although ECFMG GEMx funding made student exchanges possible for the AFREhealth student exchange pilot, additional funding contributions are needed to expand the south-to-south student exchange programme. Funding: ECFMG Challenge Grant.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214109X19301135
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