EXPECTED ROLES OF NURSES AND MIDWIVES IN BOTSWANA

Authors

  • Mabel Kefilwe Magowe University of Botswana
  • N M Seboni University of Botswana, School of Nursing
  • O Rapinyana
  • K Phetogo University of Botswana, School of Nursing

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-5293/489

Keywords:

consumer needs, midwives, nurses, roles, role expansion, tasks.

Abstract

Aim

The roles and tasks of nurses and midwives have developed significantly over the years, calling for adjustment to the current local consumer needs and expectations. This qualitative study was conducted to explore the perceived tasks and roles of nurses and midwives.

Significance of the study

The results of this study will provide guidance for development of a culturally relevant Sub Saharan nursing and midwifery practice model, and curriculum development.

Methods

The larger descriptive cross sectional qualitative regional study involved 9 Sub-Saharan African countries. We present the Botswana component of this study. Respondents were patients, community leaders, and nurse-leaders, selected through purposive sampling from different settings. The University Of Botswana Office Of Research and Development, and the Ministry of Health Research and Development Committee gave permission for the study. Participants gave written informed consent, completed a 16-item demographic questionnaire, and engaged in focus group discussions about the perceived tasks and roles of nurses and midwives. Qualitative data were textually analysed to generate themes and subthemes, supported by verbatim excerpts.

Results

Respondents stated that nurses and midwives in Botswana operate at different levels of the health care system, with dependent, interdependent and independent roles. Nurses and midwives were expected to be receptive, patient, respectful, compassionate, and knowledgeable about their work. The perceived roles included caring, collaboration, advocacy, leadership, supervision, mentoring, management and other expanded roles.

Discussion/Conclusion/recommendations

Participants highlighted the expanded roles that nurses and midwives performed beyond their scopes of practice and education, hence the need for regulation, training and incentives.

 

 

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Author Biography

Mabel Kefilwe Magowe, University of Botswana

School of Nursing, Senior Lecturer

References

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Published

2016-05-07

How to Cite

Magowe, Mabel Kefilwe, N M Seboni, O Rapinyana, and K Phetogo. 2016. “EXPECTED ROLES OF NURSES AND MIDWIVES IN BOTSWANA”. Africa Journal of Nursing and Midwifery 18 (1):103-16. https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-5293/489.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2015-10-17
Accepted 2016-04-25
Published 2016-05-07