Title
Improving the quality of STI care by private general practitioners: a South African case study.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-2005
Keywords
Family Practice, Humans, Private Practice, Quality of Health Care, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, South Africa, Urban Health
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Evaluation of an intervention to improve quality of sexually transmitted infections (STI) care among 64 private general practitioners (GPs) working in two urban districts in Gauteng Province, South Africa.
METHODS: We implemented a multifaceted intervention, the core of which were four interactive continuing medical education seminars. Changes in STI treatment practices were evaluated through record reviews before and after the continuing medical education intervention in 17 randomly selected practices in the intervention districts and in nine randomly selected practices from a reference GP group (n = 34).
RESULTS: There were statistically significant improvements in the quality of drug treatment for urethral discharge but not pelvic inflammatory disease among both intervention and reference GPs.
CONCLUSIONS: Improvements in STI quality were possibly the result of a background secular trend rather than the intervention itself. Further research is needed on financial and other incentives to improved quality of STI care in the private sector environment.
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
Citation
Schneider H, Chabikuli N, Blaauw D, Funani I, Brugha R. Improving the quality of STI care by private general practitioners: a South African case study. Sexually Transmitted Infections 2005;81(5):419-20.
PubMed ID
16199743
Link to this item at
http://epubs.rcsi.ie/ephmart/33
DOI Link
10.1136/sti.2004.010470

Comments
This article is also available from www.bmj.com