4.5 Article

Rehabilitation and primary care treatment guidelines, South Africa

Journal

BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
Volume 100, Issue 11, Pages 689-698

Publisher

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
DOI: 10.2471/BLT.22.288337

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of South Africa
  2. South African Research Chairs Initiative

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This paper describes the ten-year process of including rehabilitation referral recommendations in South Africa's primary health care standard treatment guidelines. The main lesson learned is that collaboration among rehabilitation professionals can significantly improve service delivery and increase referrals from primary health care.
The World Health Organization recognizes rehabilitation as an essential component of universal health coverage (UHC). In many countries, UHC builds on a standard benefits package of services that is informed by the country's essential medicines list, standard treatment guidelines and primary health care essential laboratory list. In South Africa, primary health care is largely provided and managed by primary health-care nurses and medical officers in accordance with primary health care standard treatment guidelines. However, rehabilitation is mostly excluded from these guidelines. This paper describes the 10-year process that led to rehabilitation referral recommendations being considered for inclusion in South Africa's primary health care standard treatment guidelines. There were five key events: (i) a breakthrough moment; (ii) producing a scientific evidence synthesis and formulating recommendations; (iii) presenting recommendations to the national essential medicines list committee; (iv) mapping rehabilitation recommendations onto relevant treatment guideline sections; and (v) submitting revised recommendations to the committee for final consideration. The main lesson learnt is that, by working together, rehabilitation professionals can be of sufficient number to make a difference, improve service delivery and increase referrals to rehabilitation from primary health care. A remaining challenge is the lack of a rehabilitation representative on the national essential medicines list committee, which could hamper understanding of rehabilitation and of the complexities of the supporting evidence.

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