The role of faith-based health professions schools in Cameroon’s health system

Main author: van Wees, Sibylle Herzig
Other authors: Sop, Maturin Desire Sop
Betsi, Emmanuel
Olongo, Silvere Antoine
Jennings, Michael
Format: Journal Article           
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Summary: Faith-based health professions schools contribute to the training of staff in many Sub-Saharan African countries. Yet little is known about these actors, their role in the health system, potential comparative advantages and challenges faced. This is a qualitative study drawing on 24 qualitative interviews and 3 focus group discussions. Participants included faith-based health professions schools, staff at faith-based health professions schools, Ministry of Health officials and donors. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. The findings reveal that understanding of faith-based health professions schools held by donors and the Ministry of Health rest on a set of assumptions rather than evidence-backed knowledge and that knowledge on key aspects is missing (not least on the market share of such actors). This suggests that collaboration with and oversight of these non-state schools is limited, raising questions about the balance of state regulation and control in the public-private mix for training health workers. Linked to this weak oversight, the findings also raise concerns over a number of problematic activities at these schools, unaccredited training programmes and the presence of missionary volunteers whose presence and actions are rarely interrogated.
Other authors: Sop, Maturin Desire Sop, Betsi, Emmanuel, Olongo, Silvere Antoine, Jennings, Michael
Language: English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2021
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