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Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa

The Practical Approach to Care Kit (PACK) training programme combines an evidence based clinical guide with an educational outreach training programme, focusing on Primary Health Care (PHC) providers in health facilities in South Africa. As the programme expands in South Africa and internationally,...

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Main Author: Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
Other Authors: Cox, Glenda
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
author2 Cox, Glenda
author_browse Cox, Glenda
Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
author_facet Cox, Glenda
Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
author_sort Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
collection Thesis
description The Practical Approach to Care Kit (PACK) training programme combines an evidence based clinical guide with an educational outreach training programme, focusing on Primary Health Care (PHC) providers in health facilities in South Africa. As the programme expands in South Africa and internationally, the health system challenges of distance, budget constraints, staff attrition, and infrastructure inadequacies require a more sustainable model which is less dependent on face-to-face facilitation. This research study focused on refining the initial design of an e-learning module and examining factors influencing its use prior to further roll out. Department of Health stakeholders, PACK trainers and nurses from PHC clinics in the Western Cape province were interviewed. Qualitative case studies were used to generate a description of nurses' onscreen learning experiences within each specific clinic under study, and to potentially comment on any similarities or differences in these experiences across the three clinics. Initial data were coded thematically, and a list of codes was developed for application to subsequent data. The theory of situated learning in communities of practice was used as a lens to examine the PACK e-learning approach. The coding list was developed and refined as data analysis continued and was the basis for drawing out key issues and themes. PACK stakeholders, trainers and nurses responded positively to the design of the elearning module overall. Key findings highlighted the challenges of access to technology and internet, and digital literacy in the South African PHC context. Learning preferences, clinical content selection, time and motivation impacted learning experiences and uptake. e-Learning completion required support within a community of practice and access on smartphones was identified as a potential enabler. e-Learning for in-service training in the PHC environment requires careful resource allocation to ensure adequate access to technology and the design of a well-supported, blended approach to e-learning to accommodate the specific needs of this group of learners.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:05.102Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher School of Education
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37321 Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella Cox, Glenda Educational Technology The Practical Approach to Care Kit (PACK) training programme combines an evidence based clinical guide with an educational outreach training programme, focusing on Primary Health Care (PHC) providers in health facilities in South Africa. As the programme expands in South Africa and internationally, the health system challenges of distance, budget constraints, staff attrition, and infrastructure inadequacies require a more sustainable model which is less dependent on face-to-face facilitation. This research study focused on refining the initial design of an e-learning module and examining factors influencing its use prior to further roll out. Department of Health stakeholders, PACK trainers and nurses from PHC clinics in the Western Cape province were interviewed. Qualitative case studies were used to generate a description of nurses' onscreen learning experiences within each specific clinic under study, and to potentially comment on any similarities or differences in these experiences across the three clinics. Initial data were coded thematically, and a list of codes was developed for application to subsequent data. The theory of situated learning in communities of practice was used as a lens to examine the PACK e-learning approach. The coding list was developed and refined as data analysis continued and was the basis for drawing out key issues and themes. PACK stakeholders, trainers and nurses responded positively to the design of the elearning module overall. Key findings highlighted the challenges of access to technology and internet, and digital literacy in the South African PHC context. Learning preferences, clinical content selection, time and motivation impacted learning experiences and uptake. e-Learning completion required support within a community of practice and access on smartphones was identified as a potential enabler. e-Learning for in-service training in the PHC environment requires careful resource allocation to ensure adequate access to technology and the design of a well-supported, blended approach to e-learning to accommodate the specific needs of this group of learners. 2023-03-07T11:25:03Z 2023-03-07T11:25:03Z 2022 2023-02-20T12:48:03Z Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37321 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Educational Technology
Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa
title_full Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa
title_fullStr Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa
title_short Primary Health Care trainers' and nurses' learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in-service training programme in the Western Cape province, South Africa
title_sort primary health care trainers and nurses learning experiences of using educational technology as part of an established in service training programme in the western cape province south africa
topic Educational Technology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37321
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