Capacity-building in clinical skills of rehabilitation workforce in low- and middle-income countries

Authors

  • Fary Khan
  • Bhasker Amatya
  • Wouter de Groote
  • Mayowa Owolabi
  • Ilyas M. Syed
  • Abderrazak Hajjoui
  • Muhammad N. Babur
  • Tahir M. Sayed
  • Yvonne Frizzell
  • Amaramalar S. Naicker
  • Maryam Fourtassi
  • Alaeldin Elmalik
  • Mary P. Galea

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2313

Keywords:

disability, rehabilitation, skills, low- and middle-income countries.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Despite the prevalence of disability in low-and middle-income countries, the clinical skills of the rehabilitation workforce are not well described. We report health professionals' perspectives on clinical skills in austere settings and identify context-specific gaps in workforce capacity. METHODS: A cross-sectional pilot survey (Pakistan, Morocco, Nigeria, Malaysia) of health professionals' working in rehabilitation in hospital and community settings. A situational-analysis survey captured assessment of clinical skills required in various rehabilitation settings. Responses were coded in a line-by-line process, and linked to categories in domains of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). RESULTS: Respondents (n = 532) from Pakistan 248, Nigeria 159, Morocco 93 and Malaysia 32 included the following: physiotherapists (52.8%), nurses (8.8%), speech (5.3%) and occupational therapists (8.5%), rehabilitation physicians (3.8%), other doctors (5.5%) and prosthetist/orthotists (1.5%). The 10 commonly used clinical skills reported were prescription of: physical activity, medications, transfer-techniques, daily-living activities, patient/carer education, diagnosis/screening, behaviour/cognitive interventions, comprehensive patient-care, referrals, assessments and collaboration. There was significant overlap in skills listed irrespective of profession. Most responses linked with ICF categories in activities/participation and personal factors. CONCLUSION: The core skills identified reflect general rehabilitation practice and a task-shifting approach, to address shortages of health workers in low-and middle-income countries.

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Published

2018-02-19

How to Cite

Khan, F., Amatya, B., de Groote, W., Owolabi, M., Syed, I. M., Hajjoui, A., … Galea, M. . P. (2018). Capacity-building in clinical skills of rehabilitation workforce in low- and middle-income countries. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 50(5), 472–479. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2313

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Section

Original Report