Developing structures for teaching family medicine
PRIMAFAMED partners will establish a network for collaboration between universities in Africa, where family medicine departments and units can learn from each other. The consortium will include departments of family medicine and primary health care of 10 African universities, which will be coordinated and supported by the Department of Family Medicine and Primary Health Care of Ghent University in Belgium.
Firstly, PRIMAFAMED partners will pool their knowledge to establish new (and strengthen existing) academic departments that offer family medicine training in participating African universities. A part-time coordinator will be appointed and there will be active exchange of existing models related to management and the structural organisation of the primary care units. The purpose of this activity is to improve the institutional framework of African universities to better integrate family medicine teaching elements.
Training African doctors
These departments will provide the institutional base that will allow the realisation of family medicine training programmes in the following phase of PRIMAFAMED. In order to better meet the human resources needs in the health care system in Africa, health care workers need to be trained in a sustainable and locally-appropriate way. This is why, following a thorough needs assessment in the field of family medicine in the Africa, the experienced partners and associates will support the African partners to develop and upgrade family medicine teaching curricula and tools.
Also, enhanced accreditation and quality assurance will be sought, and funding will be provided for staff exchanges and research. During this process, Master’s level courses in family and community medicine will be developed and suitable candidates for PhD studies will be identified. The project will take existing curricula as a starting point, enhancing them with materials and tools available. A bottom-up approach will be applied, meaning that whenever a partner or an associate develops a tool, it makes it available to others in the network. European input will be significant. For instance, the Global Health through Education Training and Service and the Network Towards Unity for Health will help with their expertise and knowledge about the health care situation in Africa. The expertise of the Flemish Interuniversity Training Programme in Family Medicine will be included. The International Centre of Reproductive Health (ICRH) at Ghent University will be responsible for the development of a module on sexual and reproductive health, gender issues and violence.






