在南非进行辅助生殖培训。

IF 3.4 Q2 REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Reproduction & fertility Pub Date : 2025-10-08 Print Date: 2025-10-01 DOI:10.1530/RAF-24-0086
Lenore Manderson, Andrea Whittaker, Trudie Gerrits
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:非洲大陆的准父母获得优质不孕不育治疗服务的机会有限。南非是非洲大陆生育保健的主要提供者,但由于只有三家公立(教学)医院提供专科培训,并通过与私营机构的伙伴关系提供支持,因此医务人员短缺,接受培训方案的等待时间可能长达数年。我们从辅助生殖的定性研究中获取数据,这些数据来自诊所访问、非正式访谈、科学会议的参与,以及对117名患者、配子捐赠者、临床医生、生殖科学家和其他人的正式访谈,以探索培训的途径和动机。学员开始这一专业的原因包括:关注非洲大陆获得妇科和生育护理的机会有限;缺乏熟练的生育专家和胚胎学家;低收入的准父母缺乏辅助生殖的选择。实习研究员表示致力于低成本试管婴儿模式,以解决缺乏负担得起和可获得的生殖保健的问题。生育专家经常有同样的担忧,并强调需要训练有素的专业人员来扩大服务。总的来说,受访者认为,尽管非洲大陆不孕症的程度和对抗逆转录病毒治疗的需求很大,但与其他生殖和健康问题相比,不孕症护理和辅助生殖的重要性较低。概要:非洲大陆各国的不孕症率是世界上最高的,但获得病因诊断、治疗和辅助生殖技术的机会却很少。辅助生殖诊所目前在若干国家,特别是加纳、尼日利亚、肯尼亚和南非开展业务。大多数支持是在私人保健系统,很少有妇女和男子能够在公立医院获得低成本的辅助生殖服务。虽然诊所、生物银行服务和实验室很少,培训也是如此。我们利用南非一项关于辅助生殖的大型研究的数据来探索培训的提供。大多数培训是在南非提供的,其他国家的人也可以参加。然而,很少有教学医院提供培训,人们在注册之前面临很长时间的延误,有时长达数年。培训机会有限,严重影响了各国满足保健需要和支持许多人口生育希望的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
FERTILITY CARE IN LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES: Training in assisted reproduction in South Africa.

Abstract: Intending parents on the African continent have limited access to quality services for infertility treatment. South Africa is the primary provider of fertility care on the continent, but because specialist training is only available in three public (teaching) hospitals, supported through partnerships with private institutions, there is a shortage of medical staff and waiting times for admission to training programmes can be years. We draw on data from our qualitative research study on assisted reproduction, generated from clinic visits, informal interviews, participation in science meetings, and formal interviews with 117 patients, gamete donors, clinicians, reproductive scientists and others to explore access to and motivation for training. Trainees' reasons for embarking on this specialisation included: concern with limited access to gynaecological and fertility care on the continent; lack of skilled fertility specialists and embryologists; and lack of options for assisted reproduction available to low-income intending parents. Trainee fellows expressed commitment to low-cost IVF models to address the lack of affordable and accessible reproductive health care. Fertility specialists often shared this concern and emphasised the need for trained professionals to expand services. In general, interviewees felt that infertility care and assisted reproduction were regarded as of lesser importance to other reproductive and health problems, despite the extent of infertility and the demand for assisted reproduction technology (ART) on the continent.

Lay summary: Countries across the African continent have the highest infertility rate in the world, yet access to diagnosis of cause, treatment and assisted reproductive technology is sparse. Assisted reproduction clinics now operate in several countries, particularly Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa. Most support is in the private health system, and few women and men have access to low-cost assisted reproduction services at public hospitals. While clinics, biobanking services and laboratories are sparse, so too is training. We draw on data from a large study on assisted reproduction in South Africa to explore the provision of training. Most training is provided in South Africa, and people from other countries can access this. However, few teaching hospitals provide training, and people face long delays, sometimes years, before they can enrol. The limited opportunities for training seriously impact the capacity of countries to meet the health needs and support the reproductive hopes of many of their populations.

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