TY - JOUR
T1 - Investment in family medicine to improve health outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa
AU - Ray, Sunanda C.
AU - Makasa, Mpundu
AU - Besigye, Innocent
AU - Shabani, Jacob S.
AU - Makwero, Martha
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Authors. Licensee: AOSIS. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License.
PY - 2025/7/28
Y1 - 2025/7/28
N2 - Family physicians (FPs), as educators, capacity builders and clinical governance leaders of primary care (PC) teams, work to make them more effective and responsive to the needs of their patients. Various strategies are required to raise the profile of Family Medicine (FM) to ensure stronger representation in health sector planning and policy development for advocacy on behalf of the communities they serve. An illustration is given of the need for FP leaders to become equal partners in the National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Planning process to ensure safer surgery at district hospitals and to address unmet surgical needs. Integrating FM teaching throughout undergraduate medical programmes familiarises graduates with FM as a possible career choice. Collaboration with professional FP associations such as in Botswana, Kenya and Zambia has helped to define and promote the discipline of FM, increasing public and professional awareness of the specialty's value. Promoting development of an FP scope of practice as a collaborative exercise between academic FPs and national associations assists in differentiating the roles of FPs versus non-specialist generalists. The new generation of young FPs has played a significant role in marketing FM globally, using social media platforms to support each other and to share information and best practices for managing themselves and their patients. Positioning multidisciplinary PC teams at the centre of health systems, with strong leadership from FPs, integrated people-centred care and evidence-based practices, could catalyse the intensity of change needed for more equitable, cost-effective and sustainable healthcare in Africa.
AB - Family physicians (FPs), as educators, capacity builders and clinical governance leaders of primary care (PC) teams, work to make them more effective and responsive to the needs of their patients. Various strategies are required to raise the profile of Family Medicine (FM) to ensure stronger representation in health sector planning and policy development for advocacy on behalf of the communities they serve. An illustration is given of the need for FP leaders to become equal partners in the National Surgical, Obstetric and Anaesthesia Planning process to ensure safer surgery at district hospitals and to address unmet surgical needs. Integrating FM teaching throughout undergraduate medical programmes familiarises graduates with FM as a possible career choice. Collaboration with professional FP associations such as in Botswana, Kenya and Zambia has helped to define and promote the discipline of FM, increasing public and professional awareness of the specialty's value. Promoting development of an FP scope of practice as a collaborative exercise between academic FPs and national associations assists in differentiating the roles of FPs versus non-specialist generalists. The new generation of young FPs has played a significant role in marketing FM globally, using social media platforms to support each other and to share information and best practices for managing themselves and their patients. Positioning multidisciplinary PC teams at the centre of health systems, with strong leadership from FPs, integrated people-centred care and evidence-based practices, could catalyse the intensity of change needed for more equitable, cost-effective and sustainable healthcare in Africa.
KW - ECSA College of Family Physicians
KW - family physicians
KW - health system strengthening
KW - national family physician associations
KW - sub-Saharan Africa
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013340565
U2 - 10.4102/phcfm.v17i1.5033
DO - 10.4102/phcfm.v17i1.5033
M3 - Article
C2 - 40776706
AN - SCOPUS:105013340565
SN - 2071-2928
VL - 17
SP - e1-e4
JO - African journal of primary health care & family medicine
JF - African journal of primary health care & family medicine
IS - 1
M1 - a5033
ER -