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What is pre-service education|
IMCI pre-service training |
Objectives of IMCI
pre-service training |
Rationale |
Lessons from the past |
Phases of IMCI pre-service
training |
Resources
| Schools involved in the Region |
Regional events |
Your views
The introduction of IMCI elements into
pre-service education represents a public health approach to
address the issues described under “What
is IMCI pre-service training”. The main objective
of IMCI pre-service training in the Region is to strengthen
the teaching of outpatient and home child care in
paediatrics and community and family medicine, in order to
produce in a sustainable way competent cadres of health
providers capable of delivering quality child care services
also in settings with very limited resources. The focus on
outpatient care is based on the availability of
standard and practical
guidelines
widely tested and formally adopted in the public health
system. It is also justified by the notion that most child
care is provided at primary health care level: improving the
quality of care at that level, while enhancing child
survival and development, should also reduce the need for
hospital care and overall child care costs. The objective of
IMCI pre-service training is achieved by providing students
with knowledge and developing skills and attitudes which
respond to the priority public health needs of their own
country. The guidelines to be promoted in teaching are based
on basic clinical aids and essential drugs which are—or
should be—available at primary health care level, to enable
the future health graduates to perform efficiently also in
settings where very limited diagnostic tools and therapeutic
options are available, once they start their practice
whether in the public or private domains. This requires not
only the incorporation of theoretical concepts (e.g.
guidelines) in teaching programmes, but also the adoption of
more active teaching methods and supervised practice of
clinical and communication skills for students to master
them, as pursued in IMCI in-service training courses. This
spin-off effect is like a little revolution in the way
teaching is often practised and can benefit other areas of
pre-service education in schools which have successfully
adopted the new teaching methods.
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