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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The need for and development of a practice management module for optometry students in South Africa

Richter, Marietjie 04 October 2010 (has links)
M.Comm. / Literature relating to Optometric Practice Management in South Africa is not available. The only text available for use by Optometry students is the book published by Gowans in 1989. This text is now outdated as many changes were instituted after the first democratic elections in 1994. Not only has Optometric Practice Management been neglected, but literature relating to Optometric education in South Africa is also not easily accessible. Very few publications dedicated to Optometric education itself have been retrieved. The earliest study was commissioned by the South African Optometric Association when Hofstetter (1980) was requested to investigate Optometric education in South Africa. The need for teaching Optometric Practice Management as part of formal undergraduate studies was investigated. Mokoena (2007) referred to the importance thereof in a letter to the editor of the Vision magazine. He referred to the requirement of Practice Management as ‘to teach and integrate a sound, practice business education into the undergraduate level of optometry at optometry schools’. Some other authors such as Schubach (2002) have indicated the need to teach basic business skills and Kriel (2003) also highlighted the requirement to teach Practice Management as a specialized skill at a postgraduate level. The utilization or performance of various Practice Management aspects was evaluated and the importance of these activities in practice was assessed. The rating of the importance of the activities has led to the suggestion of a curriculum for Optometric Practice Management for the undergraduate programme as well as a possible postgraduate course.
2

The customer gap between patients expectations and perceptions of service quality in optometric practices

Snyman, Christine 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Optometric practices, as every other organisation, are becoming more aware that the ability to address your patients' needs is the latest challenge and secret to future success. The purpose of this study is to determine the gap between the patients' expectations and their perceptions of the services rendered in the optometric practice. When the patients' perceptions of the service received meets or exceeds their expectations, the patient will be satisfied and will be encouraged to visit the practice again, increasing the long-term profitability of the practice. Most patients lack the knowledge to evaluate the quality of optometric services. As a result, they rely on the integrity and competence of the service provider. Service excellence is a combination of service promptness, quality, and design with the perception of value for money. Reliability is the most important of the five dimensions in determining patient evaluations of service quality. Since the tangible attributes are often the only element of a service that can be evaluated prior to service delivery, managers should pay a lot of attention to this dimension in order to reflect a positive image. As patients become more informed, practices should continuously research and update their strategies for the delivery of quality service. Not only do practices need to understand the current expectations of their patients, but also the future expectations desired. A key issue for future research concerns the relationship between internal service quality and external customer satisfaction as well as employee service orientation, and external service quality. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Oogkundige praktyke, soos elke ander organisasie, raak toenemend bewus dat die nuutste uitdaging en geheim tot toekomstige sukses afhang van die vermoë om pasiente se behoeftes aan te spreek. Die doelwit van hierdie studie is om die gapings te bepaal tussen die pasiënt se verwagtinge en hul persepsies van die dienste gelewer in die oogkundige praktyk. Indien die pasiënte se persepsies van die gelewerde diens, hulle verwagtinge aanspreek of oorskry, sal dit pasiënt tevredenheid bevorder en die pasiënt aanspoor om die praktyk weer te besoek, en derhalwe die langtermyn winsgewendheid van die praktyk bevorder. Die meeste pasiënte beskik oor gebrekkige kennis om die kwaliteit van die optometriese dienste te evalueer. Gevolglik vertrou hulle op die integriteit en vaardigheid van die diensverskaffer. Uitstekende dienslewering kombineer stiptelikheid, kwaliteit, en die samestelling van die diens met die persepsie van waarde vir geld. Betroubaarheid is die belangrikste van die vyf dimensies om die pasiënt se evaluasie van die kwaliteit van diens te bepaal. Aangesien die tasbare eienskappe dikwels die enigste element van die diens is wat voortydig deur die pasient evalueer kan word, behoort bestuurders baie aandag daaraan te bestee ten einde 'n positiewe beeld te weerspieël. Aangesien pasiënte toenemend meer ingelig is, behoort praktyke voortdurende navorsing te doen om hulle strategies op te skerp vir die lewering van kwaliteit diens. Praktyke moet nie net slegs die huidige verwagtinge van hul pasiënte verstaan nie, maar ook die verlangde toekomsverwagtinge. 'n Sleutelaspek vir toekomstige navorsing is die verhouding tussen interne dienskwaliteit en eksterne kliëntbevrediging, asook die werknemer se oriëntasie tot dienslewering en eksterne dienskwaliteit.

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