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Training Traditional Bonesetters in Basic Principles of Fracture Treatment

Dominic Konadu‐Yeboah, Tolgou Yempabe, Alexis D. B. Buunaaim, Peter Konadu, Ruth Owusu, Joshua Arthur, Francis Osei, Benjamín Demah Nuertey, Nicholas Karikari Mensah, Samuel Frimpong Odoom, Wilfred Addo-Larbi, Claude Martin, Polly Buehler, Reuben Addo, Benedict Owusu Yankyera, Paul Kofi Osei, Martin Azaglo, Paul Okyere, Bernice Mensah, Yussif Misbahu, Abdulaisogleh Hamdiyat, Brenda Abrefi, Doris Akuoku, Stella Minta, Matilda Pokuaa, Mohammed Amin Imoro, Mathias Dongyele, Anthony Howard, William J. Harrison

2023Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery11 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Our study assessed the effectiveness of a traditional bonesetter (TBS) educational program that was designed to increase knowledge, reduce complications, and promote the referral of patients to local hospitals by TBSs when necessary. METHODS: From April to December 2021, TBSs from the Northern Sector (the Northern, Savannah, and North East regions) and the Ashanti region of Ghana underwent a 4-day training course that had been designed to teach basic principles of fracture care with the use of local tools. We assessed the levels of knowledge of the TBSs both before and after training. The change in practice of the trained TBSs also was assessed at 6 months using a structured questionnaire and a checklist. RESULTS: In total, 157 TBSs were trained in 5 training sessions over a 9-month period. There was an improvement in knowledge in all of the modules of training, with an overall knowledge gain of 19.7% (from 67.2% to 86.9%). At 6 months of follow-up, the practices of TBSs that had most improved were record-keeping, hand hygiene, and patient rehabilitation. As a result of the referral system that was established by the training project, a total of 37 patients were referred to local hospitals in the 6 months following the training. CONCLUSIONS: Formal training for TBSs that was provided by a multidisciplinary team with use of a locally developed curriculum and tools was effective in improving the practice and outcomes of treatment by TBSs. There was marked knowledge retention by the trained TBSs at 6 months after training in fracture management. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Education, training, and the establishment of referral pathways between TBSs and local hospitals could improve trauma care in Ghana.

Topics & Concepts

Training (meteorology)MedicineChecklistMultidisciplinary approachReferralCurriculumMedical educationFamily medicinePsychologyPedagogyGeographySocial scienceCognitive psychologySociologyMeteorologyMusculoskeletal Disorders and RehabilitationGlobal Health and SurgeryTrauma and Emergency Care Studies
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