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HomeHIV Research‘Diluted human resources’ impacting on male circumcision care

‘Diluted human resources’ impacting on male circumcision care

SA vastly expanded male medical circumcision services since 2010, and while surgical efficiency and record keeping improved, the quality of surgical care, such as tracking complications, declined. The [s]Mail & Guardian[/s] reports that this is according to a study, by the [b]Centre for HIV and Aids Prevention Studies[/b] (Chaps) and the [b]Johns Hopkins School of Public Health[/b], which assessed 40 government medical male circumcision sites in six SA provinces in 2012, following a first assessment in 2011. According to [b]World Health Organisation[/b] figures, SA has the fastest scale-up among African countries offering medical male circumcision services to prevent HIV. But the study found that the scale-up of medical male circumcision services had ‘diluted human resources’, as experienced staff was redeployed to train staff in new clinics. ‘Declines in quality far outnumbered improvements,’ study authors reported.

[link url=http://mg.co.za/article/2014-05-06-quick-expansion-of-medical-circumcision-brings-challenges-study]Full Mail & Guardian report[/link]
[link url=http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0084271]PLOS Medicine abstract[/link]

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