Journal of
AIDS and HIV Research

  • Abbreviation: J. AIDS HIV Res.
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 2141-2359
  • DOI: 10.5897/JAHR
  • Start Year: 2009
  • Published Articles: 298

Full Length Research Paper

A benchmark qualitative study of health service delivery in Botswana in 1989: Nurse assessments of the primary healthcare system before the nationwide spread of HIV/AIDS

James G. Linn
  • James G. Linn
  • Optimal Solutions in Healthcare and International Development, USA.
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Debra Rose Wilson*
  • Debra Rose Wilson*
  • Tennessee State University and Walden University, United States of America.
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Thabo T. Fako
  • Thabo T. Fako
  • University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana.
  • Google Scholar


  •  Received: 11 November 2015
  •  Accepted: 01 February 2016
  •  Published: 29 February 2016

Abstract

An evaluation of the "watershed" Meharry-Botswana nurses training program in 1989 (Linn and Fako, 1990) confirmed that the maternal, child health, and family planning nursing practices taught by the multi-year education intervention in the 1970s had been widely disseminated and adopted. Based on a national sample of over 350 practicing nurses, this was strong evidence of the high clinical capacity of the primary healthcare system which was soon to be challenged by a generalized epidemic of HIV/AIDS. While the quantitative data from this evaluation was published, the qualitative information, which includes in-depth local nurse assessments of important parameters of the national primary healthcare system was reported, but remained unpublished until included in this manuscript. From this detailed information, we can develop a deeper understanding of the nurse clinician perceived strengths and weaknesses of Botswana’s primary healthcare system in 1989, immediately prior to the nationwide spread of HIV/AIDS. The findings show the high professionalism and resilience of the Botswana nurses-- qualities that helped them to successfully address the HIV/AIDS pandemic several years later.

Key words: HIV care, nursing, Botswana.