Toward interprofessional service-learning and social accountability in health: One South African University’s process-oriented-participatory journey

2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 291-294
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Du Toit ◽  
Shanene Olivera ◽  
Kegan Topper ◽  
Riaan van de Venter ◽  
Maggie Williams ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Maxine Holmqvist ◽  
Carole Courtney ◽  
Ryan Meili ◽  
Alixe Dick

Background: Collaborative practice is a necessary component of providing effective, socially responsive, patient-centred care; however, effective teamwork requires training. Canadian student-run clinics are interprofessional community service-learning initiatives where students plan and deliver clinical and health promotion services, with the assistance of licensed healthcare professionals.Methods and Findings: In this article, we use a reflective approach to examine the phenomenon of student-run clinics in Canada. First, we briefly review the history of student-run clinics and then describe one particular clinic in detail. Then, drawing on the experiences of student-run clinics across the country, we identify common themes and challenges that we believe characterize these programs.Conclusion: Student-run clinics in Canada emphasize health equity, interprofessionalism, and student leadership. As more student-run clinics are developed, both nationally and internationally, co-ordinated research efforts are needed to determine their effects on students, institutions, communities, and healthcare systems. If educators can learn to collaborate effectively with student leaders, student-run clinics may be ideal sites for advancing learning around interprofessionalism and social accountability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (162) ◽  
pp. 135-143
Author(s):  
Ebony B. Whisenant ◽  
Nana Aisha Garba ◽  
Gregory W. Schneider ◽  
Eduardo Camps‐Romero ◽  
Onelia G. Lage ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Anne De Chastonay ◽  
Michael Bugas ◽  
Shreya Soni ◽  
Robert Swap

This paper presents a sustainable cook stove project made possible by a partnership between a United States university and a South African community.  Faculty and students from the University of Virginia and the Mashamba Primary Presidential School collaborated to produce a cleaner and more sustainable method of cooking. The Rocket Stove, a high efficiency stove that uses wood as fuel, was adapted and implemented in the Mashamba Primary Presidential School in 2010 through a collective effort from both the University and Mashamba.  Since then, University of Virginia students have revisited Mashamba and are now working closely with the primary school to determine the positive and negative impacts the cookstoves have instilled on the community. As collaboration between the University of Virginia and Mashamba Primary School continues and more knowledge about the integration of the stoves is revealed, the partners hope to disseminate information about the Rocket Stove to other portions of the region.  The following is a story about the implementation of the rocket stove within a community. It is also a story of how service learning and engaged scholarship can produce a sustainable solution impacting what development means to a community, creating a ripple effect within an entire region.


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