Cherian Varghese, Baridalyne Nongkynrih, Suresh Kumar, Eric L Krakauer, Anil Paleri, Vijay Viswanathan, Aereosonova Khongsit, Ankit Chandra, Nalika Gunawardena, Ana Mafalda Dancante, Anne-Sophie Allègre, Corentin Piroux, Heini Utunen, Bente Mikkelsen
{"title":"\"开放式世界卫生组织 \"东南亚地区非传染性疾病 PEN-HEARTS 课程:在 100 天内为 10000 个国家培训 10000 名医疗保健人员。","authors":"Cherian Varghese, Baridalyne Nongkynrih, Suresh Kumar, Eric L Krakauer, Anil Paleri, Vijay Viswanathan, Aereosonova Khongsit, Ankit Chandra, Nalika Gunawardena, Ana Mafalda Dancante, Anne-Sophie Allègre, Corentin Piroux, Heini Utunen, Bente Mikkelsen","doi":"10.4103/WHO-SEAJPH.WHO-SEAJPH_26_24","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Enhancing health-care workforce capacity in primary care settings is critical for delivering quality care to individuals with noncommunicable diseases (NCDs). Despite significant resources allocated to traditional face-to-face training methods, challenges persist in terms of scale, coverage, training material standards, and availability of trainers across different domains. Self-paced learning through an accessible platform with evaluation is a feasible option to overcome these challenges. Taking advantage of the technology and reach of the OpenWHO platform, the WHO South-East Asia Region developed four SEARO NCD PEN-HEARTS courses. Content was adapted from WHO guidance to low- or middle-income countries context. These courses cover NCD service planning, primary health-care interventions, diabetic foot care, and palliative care. The courses target primary health-care managers tasked with planning, training, implementing, and monitoring NCD health services. This is the first set of OpenWHO courses on NCD services for primary health-care launched on October 26, 2023. Courses were rolled out through WHO country offices in SEAR. WHO staff in HQ and regions were also informed. SEAnetNCD network which includes 10 institutions from eight countries of Southeast Asia, with more than 100 members were appraised of the courses through a web-based meeting. In addition, social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and WhatsApp groups were used extensively. We observed a high level of interest and uptake for the courses. Within 100 days, the four courses had 18,250 enrolments with 12,090 unique users. More than 75% of users were in the 20-39 age group and covered diverse areas of work, ranging from health professionals, students, public health experts, national health ministries, and United Nations staff. Over 7,000 certificates have been awarded through graded assessments with average scores of 75%. Such courses of short duration focusing on specific skills and built with WHO guidance can be a solution to addressing gaps in capacity building.</p>","PeriodicalId":37393,"journal":{"name":"WHO South-East Asia journal of public health","volume":"13 1","pages":"24-28"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"\\\"OpenWHO\\\" SEARO NCD PEN-HEARTS Courses: Training 10000 Health Care Providers in 100 Countries in 100 Days.\",\"authors\":\"Cherian Varghese, Baridalyne Nongkynrih, Suresh Kumar, Eric L Krakauer, Anil Paleri, Vijay Viswanathan, Aereosonova Khongsit, Ankit Chandra, Nalika Gunawardena, Ana Mafalda Dancante, Anne-Sophie Allègre, Corentin Piroux, Heini Utunen, Bente Mikkelsen\",\"doi\":\"10.4103/WHO-SEAJPH.WHO-SEAJPH_26_24\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Enhancing health-care workforce capacity in primary care settings is critical for delivering quality care to individuals with noncommunicable diseases (NCDs). 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"OpenWHO" SEARO NCD PEN-HEARTS Courses: Training 10000 Health Care Providers in 100 Countries in 100 Days.
Enhancing health-care workforce capacity in primary care settings is critical for delivering quality care to individuals with noncommunicable diseases (NCDs). Despite significant resources allocated to traditional face-to-face training methods, challenges persist in terms of scale, coverage, training material standards, and availability of trainers across different domains. Self-paced learning through an accessible platform with evaluation is a feasible option to overcome these challenges. Taking advantage of the technology and reach of the OpenWHO platform, the WHO South-East Asia Region developed four SEARO NCD PEN-HEARTS courses. Content was adapted from WHO guidance to low- or middle-income countries context. These courses cover NCD service planning, primary health-care interventions, diabetic foot care, and palliative care. The courses target primary health-care managers tasked with planning, training, implementing, and monitoring NCD health services. This is the first set of OpenWHO courses on NCD services for primary health-care launched on October 26, 2023. Courses were rolled out through WHO country offices in SEAR. WHO staff in HQ and regions were also informed. SEAnetNCD network which includes 10 institutions from eight countries of Southeast Asia, with more than 100 members were appraised of the courses through a web-based meeting. In addition, social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and WhatsApp groups were used extensively. We observed a high level of interest and uptake for the courses. Within 100 days, the four courses had 18,250 enrolments with 12,090 unique users. More than 75% of users were in the 20-39 age group and covered diverse areas of work, ranging from health professionals, students, public health experts, national health ministries, and United Nations staff. Over 7,000 certificates have been awarded through graded assessments with average scores of 75%. Such courses of short duration focusing on specific skills and built with WHO guidance can be a solution to addressing gaps in capacity building.
期刊介绍:
The journal will cover technical and clinical studies related to health, ethical and social issues in field of Public Health, Epidemiology, primary health care, epidemiology, health administration, health systems, health economics, health promotion, public health nutrition, communicable and non-communicable diseases, maternal and child health, occupational and environmental health, social and preventive medicine. Articles with clinical interest and implications will be given preference.