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Prioritising data quality challenges in electronic healthcare systems in South AfricaBotha, Marna 10 1900 (has links)
Data quality is one of many challenges experienced in electronic healthcare (e-health) services in South Africa. The collection of data with substandard data quality leads to inappropriate information for health and management purposes. Evidence of challenges with regard to data quality in e-health systems led to the purpose of this study, namely to prioritise data quality challenges experienced by data users of e-health systems in South Africa. The study followed a sequential QUAL-quan mixed method research design to realise the research purpose. After carrying out a literature review on the background of e-health and the current status of research on data quality challenges, a qualitative study was conducted to verify and extend the identified possible e-health data quality challenges. A quantitative study to prioritise data quality challenges experienced by data users of e-health systems followed. Data users of e-health systems in South Africa served as the unit of analysis in the study. The data collection process included interviews with four data quality experts to verify and extend the possible e-health data quality challenges identified from literature. This was followed by a survey targeting 100 data users of e-health systems in South Africa for which 82 responses were received.
A prioritised list of e-health data quality challenges has been compiled from the research results. This list can assist data users of e-health systems in South Africa to improve the quality of data in those systems. The most important e-health data quality challenge is a lack of training for e-health systems data users. The prioritised list of e-health data quality challenges allowed for evidence-based recommendations which can assist health institutions in South Africa to ensure future data quality in e-health systems. / School of Computing / M. Sc. (Computing)
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Dentistry : a new era : the change toward oral wellness, evidence based care and managed care at the turn of the century, with recommendations for dentistryMorgan, Heather 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2000. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This report provides a broad overview of the health industry, and the dental industry in
particular, identifying trends and searching for possible solutions to problems posed by these
trends. It attempts to offer perspectives of importance to all the stakeholders in health care -
the patients, the providers of care and third party payers.
The current focus of healthcare industry is not actually the health of the patient. Practitioners
(the providers) focus too much on treatment, while insurance companies and governments
(the payers) emphasise cost containment.
As national health care costs spiral, it is ironic that the main reasons for the dramatic health
improvements over the last few decades are improvements in socio-economic factors and
changes in lifestyle, rather than better treatment. The willingness of insurers to cover new or
improved services has acted as a continuing stimulus to cost-increasing advances in medical
technology and in tum to spending growth.
Managed care has evolved to attempt to improve resource allocation in health care. Thirdparty
private-sector regulators have wrested power from government regulators. Their gain in
power relative to private practitioners has shifted the power balance from the supply side to
the demand side of health care. By leveraging their power in the use of information
technology, the practitioner has been forced into a defensive, reactive stance.
Managed care is being implemented by profit-driven third parties that benefit from the cost
savings. As health providers are the ones who have to implement the cost-savings; it is
proposed that they are the ones who should manage healthcare. The ideal would be a coordinated
approach with funders and service providers working toward a common goal.
Financial accountability is forcing dental practitioners to evaluate their mode of practice in a
critical manner. Promoting health, by educating and evoking behaviour change will create a
better world for current and future generations. There is a shift in focus from the health of the individual at all costs, to the health of the population. There should be a special emphasis on
the dental health of children for whom prevention offers the most gain in outcome.
Evidence-based care evolved from the search for the best care, in terms of quality and price,
outcome and process, and attempts to reduce variability and subjectivity in clinical decisions,
by using systematic reviews of quality evidence to increase objectivity.
Emphasis on improved outcomes provides earlier, more valuable, long-term improvements
for a patient, than the later, short-term benefit of a cure.
Because most canes and gum disease is preventable, dental health professionals should
accentuate health promotion and education of patients. The benefits would be to the
advantage of all stakeholders in health. A focus on prevention for children could be the ideal
form of dental private practice to instil oral wellness in children. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie verslag is 'n breë oorsig van die gesondsheidsindustrie, en van die tandheelkunde
industrie in besonder om tendense te identifiseer en na moontlike oplossing te soek vir
probleme wat hieruit mag spruit. Dit poog om perspektiewe aan te bied wat van belang is vir
die betrokke rolspelers - die pasiënte, die diensverskaffers en die befondsers.
Die huidige fokus van gesondheidsorg is nie eintlik die gesondheid van die pasiënt nie. Die
die voorsieners van sorg fokus meestal op behandeling, terwyl versekeringsmaatskappye en
die regering (die betalers) fokus op die besnoeing van koste.
Terwyl nasionale gesondheidskostes styg, is dit ironies dat die belangrikste redes vir die
dramaties verbetering in gesondheid oor die laaste paar dekades eerder verbeteringe in sosioekonomiese
faktore en veranderinge in leefwyse is as beter behandeling. Die bereidwilligheid
van versekeraars om nuwe en verbeterde dienste te dek, is die oorsaak van die aanhoudende
stimulus vir mediese tegnologiese vooruitgang en koste stygings.
Bestuurde sorg het ontwikkel om te probeer om bron toewysing in gesondheidsorg te
verbeter. Derde party privaatsektor-reguleerders het die mag van regering-reguleerders
ontruk. Hul invloed, relatief tot die van privaat praktisyns, het die mags-ewewig verskuif van
die voorsienings- na die aanvraagkant van gesondheidsorg. Deur die gebruik van hulle
voordeel op die gebied van inligtingstegnologie, het hulle die praktisyn in 'n defensiewe
houding gedwing.
Bestuurde Gesondheidsorg word beheer deur winsgedrewe derde partye wie baat vind by
kostebesparings. Aangesien gesondheidsverskaffers die kostebesparings moet implementeer,
word daar aanbeveel dat hulle gesondheidsorg moet bestuur. 'n Gesonde samewerkings
ooreenkoms tussen befondsers en diensverskaffers is wenslik.
Finansiële verantwoordelikheid dwing tandartse om hulle praktyke krities te evalueer. Daar is
'n fokus verskuiwing vanaf die gesondheid van die individu, ten alle koste, na die gesondheid
van die bevolking. Besondere klem behoort geplaas te word op die mondgesondheid van
kinders, vir wie voorkoming die meeste baat inhou. Bewys-gebaseerde Gesondheidsorg het ontwikkel uit die soektog na die beste sorg in terme
van kwaliteit en koste, uitkoms en proses, en pogings om wisselvalligheid en subjektiwiteit in
kliniese besluite te verminder. Klem op beter resultate gee vroeër, meer waardevolle
langtermyn verbeteringe vir die pasiënt, as die later kort-termyn voordele van genesing.
Omdat tandbederf en tandvleissiektes voorkombaar is, behoort tandheelkundiges die
bevordering van mondgesondheid te beklemtoon. Voorkoming by kinders word gesuggereer
as die ideale vorm van privaat praktyk om mondgesondheid te bevorder.
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Challenges regarding the implementation of Employment Equity Act within the Department of Health and the management thereof: a case study of Vhembe DistrictNdou, Badinwaagwaani Joseph 13 January 2015 (has links)
MPM / Oliver Tambo Institute of Governance and Policy Studies
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A perspective on healthcare delivery systems with the emphasis on South African healthcare and the need for reformKooverjee, Mukesh Manilal 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The need for efficient and equitable health provision remains a challenge for all
countries and economies of the world. Defining health, healthcare and health
provision are contentious issues, and public debate rages on as governments
throughout the world attempt to quell public demands and expectations.
Healthcare scenarios differ vastly from country to country, each attempting to
accommodate its own needs, given the limitations placed on the systems in
terms of human and financial resources. These differences are large as will be
seen when countries with developed market economies are compared to those in
the less fortunate Third World. The financing of healthcare systems is a complex
and challenging task. Affordability of healthcare is an issue for all nations of the
world. Most countries enjoy a mix of private and public funding to ensure that
some degree of good health is attained by the nation as a whole.
South Africa has a unique health system in that it has two distinct and separate
health systems. This is not by chance. South Africa is a country that boasts
enormous diversity but huge inequalities in terms of race, culture, class and
income. Systems had therefore developed along very defined lines where the
privileged have had access to expensive, modern and private healthcare while
the poor and indigent have had to use a poorly structured public service. The purpose of this literature review is to research and to define those issues
and concepts which require clearer perspective. It will also look at healthcare. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die noodsaaklikheid vir effektiewe, billike en regverdige gesondheidsvoorsiening
bly 'n uitdaging vir alle ekonomieë van die wêreld. Om gesondheid,
gesondheidsorg- en gesondheidsvoorsiening te definieër, is 'n kontensieuse
aangeleentheid en die openbare debat duur voort, soos regerings in die wêreld
poog om te voldoen aan oorweldigende openbare eise en verwagtinge in hierdie
verband.
Gesondheidsorg-opsies verskil drasties van land tot land, wat elk poog om sy eie
behoeftes te akkommodeer, gegewe die beperkings wat die sisteem belas in
terme van menslike en finansiële hulpbronne. Hierdie verskille is beduidend,
soos wat gesien kan word wanneer lande met ontwikkelde mark-ekonomieë
vergelyk word met die lande in die minder bevoorregte derde-wêreld. Die
finansiering van gesondheidsorg-sisteme is 'n komplekse en uitdagende taak.
Die bekostigbaarheid van gesondheidsorg is 'n aangeleentheid wat al die lande
van die wêreld raak. Die meeste lande van die wêreld het 'n gemengde
gesondheidsorg-sisteem wat bestaan uit gedeeltelik privaat en gedeeltelik
openbare fondse, sodat toegesien word dat 'n mate van goeie gesondheid bereik
word deur die land as geheel. Suid-Afrika het 'n unieke gesondheidsorg-sisteem deurdat twee besondere en
aparte gesondheidsisteme bestaan, wat beslis nie toevallig is nie. Suid-Afrika is
'n land wat spog met enorme verskeidenheid, maar beduidende ongelykhede in
terme van ras, kultuur, klas en inkomste. Gesondheidsorg-sisteme het dus
ontwikkel langs baie beslisde lyne waar die bevoorregtes toegang gehad het tot
duur, moderne en privaat vesekerings-gebaseerde gesondheidsorg, terwyl die
arm en armlastiges gebruik moes maak van 'n swakker gestruktureerde
openbare diens.
Die doel van hierde nagevorsde oorsig is om navorsing te doen om sisteme uit 'n
globale perspektief te identifiseer en daardie beginsels toe te pas, wat voordelig
kan wees in 'n plaaslike konteks. Daar word aanvaar dat die Suid-Afrikaanse
gesondheidsorg-sisteem baie het om te leer van ervarings in beide die
ontwikkelde en ontwikkelende lande. 'n Besondere begrip hiervoor, is die basis
waarop 'n suksesvolle gesondheidsorg-sisteem in hierdie land gevestig kan
word.
Daar word gehoop dat deur die besondere perspektief te hê, sekere werkbare
oplossings gevind en bereik kan word.
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Transforming the funding of health care in South Africa : a taxation perspective28 September 2015 (has links)
M.Com. (South African & International Taxation) / The tax system in South Africa makes provision for everyday South African citizens to contribute to a greater or lesser extent towards health care funding in South Africa. However, as a result of the high unemployment rate, a large gap exists between tax contributors and non-tax contributors. This raises the question of whether it is fair that the burden to fund the proposed National Health Insurance (NHI) initiative in South Africa is borne by the small percentage of current tax contributors. The purpose of this research was to provide a taxation perspective on the different funding models and financing options available to the South African government for consideration in developing the NHI implementation strategy. The study evaluated the four traditional health care models used worldwide and assessed existing health care systems in selected first and third world countries in order to contribute towards the development of the proposed NHI system in South Africa. The health care models used by France, The United States, The United Kingdom, Brazil and Spain were evaluated in order to achieve an understanding of the funding approaches followed by these countries. It was found that although it is inevitable that South African tax contributors will have to be more heavily taxed in order to fund the NHI, as there are only limited possibilities for distributing the tax burden evenly. The main stumbling block in finding an equitable funding solution is the fact that there is a large disparity in South African income tax contributors.
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A discussion on the ethical complexities of micro-level decision making in the South African private health insurance industry.Cazes, Aerelle Liëtte January 2017 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Applied Ethics For Professionals, July 2017 / Health and, by extension, healthcare is accepted to be a valuable and important social good that is both a good
in and of itself, as well as necessary to achieve life’s goals. Its fair distribution is therefore properly the subject
of ethical concern and in the era of modern medicine where costs and potentially limitless treatments exceed
available resources, rationing healthcare has become an unavoidable necessity. Since such rationing implies
that not everyone’s needs or preferences can be met, a fair and just way of rationing healthcare is a widely
debated and controversial topic that, to date, remains unresolved. Where third-party private funding
organisations are tasked with these rationing responsibilities, the ethical complexities are compounded by
perceived conflicts between the ethical frameworks that govern corporate organisations versus those that
govern healthcare. Given the apparent inability of normative theories to resolve the problem of how to ration
healthcare fairly, there has been a shift in thinking to considerations of procedural justice and a dominant
model, Accountability for Reasonableness (AFR), has emerged as the favoured procedure for healthcare
decision-making. The report shows why health is an important social value and examines the key models and
principles that dominate the rationing debate as well as why the conflict between healthcare ethics and
organisational ethics create additional complexities that must be considered when making these funding
decisions. Furthermore it explores the rationales for resorting to procedural accounts with specific emphasis on
the parameters and validity of AFR. The report concludes that even though the AFR framework may be a
legitimate and just process that can effectively frame decision-making and provide a platform to drive
transparency and consistency, like most procedural accounts, it does not guarantee that the outcomes it
produces are necessarily fair or just. Therefore a straightforward application of AFR cannot resolve the
healthcare rationing debate which should, given its ethical complexity, continue to appeal to the important
ethical principles that currently govern the field. / XL2018
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Exploring general practitioners' management of patients with depression within the private health care sector in Johannesburg, South Africa.Repensek, Milica 03 April 2013 (has links)
The majority of persons within South Africa (of whom 16% have claimed to have suffered from common mental disorders such as depression) that use medical treatment do so through primary care (Patel et al., 2007; Williams et al., 2007). However, studies have shown that general practitioners (GPs) often overlook, ignore, misdiagnose and even offer inappropriate treatment for mental illness (c.f. Lotrakul & Saipanish, 2009; Qwabe, 2009). Since South Africa is comprised of a multitude of diverse peoples from varying culture backgrounds, cultural diversity needs to be considered within every interaction, especially when GPs consult with individuals with depression. This study, thus, aims to explore GPs’ management of depression by investigating diagnosis or detection, treatment and referral patterns of GPs where their considerations of patient’s cultural worldviews are also investigated. This study utilised a semi-structured interview schedule on a convenient sample of six GP’s. Thematic content analysis was used to analyse salient themes from the data. Eight themes were found, namely: diagnosing, treating and referring patients with depression, cultural implications in general practice, training of GPs, the evolution of the medical field and its practices, disadvantaged communities and access to health care resources as well as the ethics of practice. These results are discussed in relation to local and international literature in the field.
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Conceptions of illness, help seeking pathways and attitudes towards an integrated health care system : perspectives from psychological counsellors, traditional healers and health care users.Zondo, Siyabulela Felicia. January 2008 (has links)
Perceptions of health and illness which include the perceived cause and recourse play an
important role in diagnosis and management of illness. Traditional and allopathic
medicines are used simultaneously and sometimes without the knowledge of the health
professional and this has an impact on clinical outcomes. Overlooking patients’
subjective experience, health providers’ biases and prejudice may pose a negative impact
on clinical outcomes. This study explores patients’, traditional healers’ and psychological
counselors’ perception of illness by conducting interviews and administering open-ended
questionnaires. The data is analyzed both qualitatively and quantitatively through the use
of content analysis and non-parametric statistical procedures. The results indicate that
the concept of illness is complex and multidimensional with physical and socio-spiritual
aspects. Effective management requires a joint approach between indigenous and western
health systems. The results further show that traditional healers fully embrace the
integrated health approach while there is some skepticism and uncertainty from
psychological counselors which could be stemming from their training. There is still
work to be done in terms of health planning and policy but also the training of health
professionals. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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An in-depth investigation of the experience of sexual assault and factors that determine non-adherence to post exposure prophylaxis (PEP) after sexual assault in a sample of raped women survivors attending a public health clinic in the Eastern Cape.Khuzwayo, Nelisiwe. January 2008 (has links)
Prevention of HIV following sexual assault is an important aspect of rape care. This includes taking Post Exposure Prophylaxis for 28 days. The present study aimed to provide an in-depth understanding of social and environmental factors that predisposed, promoted and also served as barriers to adherence to post exposure prophylaxis to prevent HIV infection after sexual assault in women in the Eastern Cape Province. The study involved a purposive sample of women who were offered Post Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) after a sexual assault. Sixteen women were accessed at the Sinawe Referral Centre and participated in the study. Their ages ranged from 16 to 73 years. An interview guide was developed to assist the researcher, and semistructured, in-depth interviews were used to collect data. These women were interviewed at the end of 28 days of taking the prophylactic medication. The data were analyzed inductively using grounded theory. Only three women completed the 28 days of PEP treatment. Participants gave different explanations for why they did not complete the treatment with only four participants returning to the centre for their medication. Some reported having no money for transport; others mentioned deciding to discontinue the medication because of its side-effects. Poor support systems, both within the community and the health services, including the provision of conflicting information also played a role. The study showed that few women were able to complete their PEP medication and knowledge about the service and access to it were the main factors that lead to non-adherence. There is an urgent need for the improvement of PEP services particular in the support to the women during the period of taking the PEP treatment to ensure protection from HIV after a sexual assault. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.
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Health insurance provisions in community micro finance : a community case study.Rakoloti, Thabo oa. January 2003 (has links)
Micro Finance Institutions are being advocated as vehicles to provide poor people with loans to start business enterprises. Micro Health Insurance is offered to insure against the risk of ill-health in the enterprise. An interesting aspect of this initiative is that it is donor driven to service the needs of the poor and the 'unbankable.' However, it was the researcher's considered view that it may not be easy to build a sustainable Micro Health Insurance Scheme for poorer people. The study thus sought to explore the possibility of developing a sustainable Micro Health Insurance Scheme in the context of acute poverty, free health care, the burden of HIV/AIDS and other diseases, the growing informal sector, erratic and unreliable incomes and the nature of risks faced by these prospective clients. To develop a thorough understanding of the subject matter, extensive reading was carried out. The researcher then designed an interviewer-administered questionnaire. The study had a total of 34 respondents, most of whom where members of a Financial Service Co-operatives, which are community-banking structures that provide a range of financial products for poorer people and those in the informal economy. It is clear from the study that these people are faced with a number of risks. There are several problems that may affect the possibility of building a sustainable health insurance scheme. The present study does not provide any statistical evidence but explores the theme of using the concept of risk and vulnerability to understand the poverty in which Micro Finance and Micro Health Insurance is located. The study provides an array of policy options that can be explored to provide for the health care needs of poorer people, as well as suggestions for future research. / Thesis (M.Dev. Studies)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.
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