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Assessing the twinning model in the Rwandan Human Resources for Health Program: goal setting, satisfaction and perceived skill transfer

Assessing the twinning model in the Rwandan Human Resources for Health Program: goal setting, satisfaction and perceived skill transfer
Assessing the twinning model in the Rwandan Human Resources for Health Program: goal setting, satisfaction and perceived skill transfer
BACKGROUND:
Because of the shortage of health professionals, particularly in specialty areas, Rwanda initiated the Human Resources for Health (HRH) Program. In this program, faculty from United States teaching institutions (USF) "twin" with Rwandan Faculty (RF) to transfer skills. This paper assesses the twinning model, exploring USF and RF goal setting, satisfaction and perceptions of the effectiveness of skill transfer within the twinning model.

METHODS:
All USF and RF in the HRH Program from August 2012-May 2014 were invited to participate. An 85-item questionnaire for USF and 71-item questionnaire for RF were administered via Survey Monkey in April and May 2014. Associations among primary outcomes were assessed and factors related with outcomes were modeled using logistic regression.

RESULTS:
Most RF and USF reported setting goals with their twin (89% and 71%, respectively). Half of RF (52%) reported effective skill transfer compared to 10% of USF. Only 38% of RF and 28% of USF reported being very satisfied with the twinning model. There was significant overlap in the three operational outcomes. For RF, the following factors were associated with outcomes: for effective skill transfer, being able to communicate in a common language and working at a nursing site outside of Kigali; and for satisfaction, 7+ years of professional experience and being part of a male RF-female USF twin pair. For USF, the following factors were associated with outcomes: for setting goals, prior teaching experience; and for satisfaction, experience in low resource settings for one month or less and feeling that HRH promotes a culture of respect.

CONCLUSIONS:
Twinning is the cornerstone of the HRH Program in Rwanda. These findings helped the HRH team identify key areas to improve the twinning experience including better recruitment and orientation of USF and RF, consideration of additional factors during the twinning process, provide language training support, facilitate joint twin activities and cross-cultural training and improve the site leadership buy-in and support of the program. These results can inform other programs using twinning to develop skills in the health workforce.
1744-8603
1-14
Ndenga, Esperance
db395b19-38c6-440e-8aa8-ba20fa981307
Uwizeye, Glorieuse
76a6c33d-decd-421e-8060-ea9bd8bc98f1
Thomson, Dana R.
c6aa22a0-9ee2-4d86-9bd4-b3a8487eb15b
Uwitonze, Eric
9c921da9-47a9-4516-901c-279da0a0b89d
Mubiligi, Joel
c1ab5b53-417d-406e-ba23-f365ecb04c89
Hedt-Gauthier, Bethany L.
5b682cfb-52e1-4427-999e-67fbd639c0b1
Wilkes, Michael
bf2406bf-4200-4afd-84fd-e5aaf979d0ee
Binagwaho, Agnes
90677500-22fd-4d44-944f-00f969c3f20b
Ndenga, Esperance
db395b19-38c6-440e-8aa8-ba20fa981307
Uwizeye, Glorieuse
76a6c33d-decd-421e-8060-ea9bd8bc98f1
Thomson, Dana R.
c6aa22a0-9ee2-4d86-9bd4-b3a8487eb15b
Uwitonze, Eric
9c921da9-47a9-4516-901c-279da0a0b89d
Mubiligi, Joel
c1ab5b53-417d-406e-ba23-f365ecb04c89
Hedt-Gauthier, Bethany L.
5b682cfb-52e1-4427-999e-67fbd639c0b1
Wilkes, Michael
bf2406bf-4200-4afd-84fd-e5aaf979d0ee
Binagwaho, Agnes
90677500-22fd-4d44-944f-00f969c3f20b

Ndenga, Esperance, Uwizeye, Glorieuse and Thomson, Dana R. et al. (2016) Assessing the twinning model in the Rwandan Human Resources for Health Program: goal setting, satisfaction and perceived skill transfer. Globalization and Health, 12 (4), 1-14. (doi:10.1186/s12992-016-0141-4). (PMID:26822614)

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND:
Because of the shortage of health professionals, particularly in specialty areas, Rwanda initiated the Human Resources for Health (HRH) Program. In this program, faculty from United States teaching institutions (USF) "twin" with Rwandan Faculty (RF) to transfer skills. This paper assesses the twinning model, exploring USF and RF goal setting, satisfaction and perceptions of the effectiveness of skill transfer within the twinning model.

METHODS:
All USF and RF in the HRH Program from August 2012-May 2014 were invited to participate. An 85-item questionnaire for USF and 71-item questionnaire for RF were administered via Survey Monkey in April and May 2014. Associations among primary outcomes were assessed and factors related with outcomes were modeled using logistic regression.

RESULTS:
Most RF and USF reported setting goals with their twin (89% and 71%, respectively). Half of RF (52%) reported effective skill transfer compared to 10% of USF. Only 38% of RF and 28% of USF reported being very satisfied with the twinning model. There was significant overlap in the three operational outcomes. For RF, the following factors were associated with outcomes: for effective skill transfer, being able to communicate in a common language and working at a nursing site outside of Kigali; and for satisfaction, 7+ years of professional experience and being part of a male RF-female USF twin pair. For USF, the following factors were associated with outcomes: for setting goals, prior teaching experience; and for satisfaction, experience in low resource settings for one month or less and feeling that HRH promotes a culture of respect.

CONCLUSIONS:
Twinning is the cornerstone of the HRH Program in Rwanda. These findings helped the HRH team identify key areas to improve the twinning experience including better recruitment and orientation of USF and RF, consideration of additional factors during the twinning process, provide language training support, facilitate joint twin activities and cross-cultural training and improve the site leadership buy-in and support of the program. These results can inform other programs using twinning to develop skills in the health workforce.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 January 2016
Published date: 28 January 2016
Organisations: Social Statistics & Demography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 404196
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404196
ISSN: 1744-8603
PURE UUID: 19cb9679-2fef-451e-b9dc-5b9a30e7a5ed
ORCID for Dana R. Thomson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9507-9123

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Date deposited: 03 Jan 2017 14:57
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Esperance Ndenga
Author: Glorieuse Uwizeye
Author: Dana R. Thomson ORCID iD
Author: Eric Uwitonze
Author: Joel Mubiligi
Author: Bethany L. Hedt-Gauthier
Author: Michael Wilkes
Author: Agnes Binagwaho

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