Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/5369
Title: Postgraduate education in South African emergency care practitioners : a social realist study
Authors: Abdullah, Naseef 
Keywords: Prehospital;Postgraduate education;Pursue;Eschew;Emergency Medical Care
Issue Date: 2024
Abstract: 
INTRODUCTION
The paucity of research originating from low- and middle-income countries, particularly in
the field of emergency care, demands that those entrenched in the healthcare system go
on to make meaningful contributions to the knowledge economy of low- and middle income countries. While the rest of the world builds an appetite for highly skilled South
African prehospital practitioners, the emergency care field in South Africa desperately
needs practitioners who can engage with research and advance the profession through
evidence-based practice. Achieving this requires emergency care practitioners to embark
on postgraduate education programmes to learn research skills. Given the shortage of
emergency care practitioners in South Africa, the paucity of prehospital-specific research
and the large number of paramedics that pursue employment and education abroad,
understanding the factors that influence emergency care practitioner’s agency in pursuing
or eschewing postgraduate education is extremely important as this affects the paramedic
workforce and the development of the field in South Africa.
AIM
The study aimed to formulate a deeper understanding of why ECPs pursue or eschew
postgraduate education.
METHODS
The study made use of a mixed method exploratory sequential research design. Using
both quantitative and qualitative methods generated a thorough understanding of the
research problem in the given context. The qualitative phase constituted Phase 1 of the
study and used focus group discussions and one-on-one interviews with key stakeholders
in the emergency medical services. The findings of this phase informed the quantitative
phase (Phase 2) of the study, in which an online structured questionnaire was
administered to emergency care practitioners.

FINDINGS
More than half (54%) of the sample of emergency care practitioners pursued
postgraduate education. Among the 46% of emergency care practitioners who eschewed
postgraduate education, the majority applied their profession in South Africa. This study,
therefore, found a decrease in the likelihood of pursuing postgraduate education among
emergency care practitioners working in South Africa compared to those working abroad
(OR 0.57, CI: 0.25–1.25). The largest proportion (81%) of those who pursued
postgraduate education occupied roles within academia. Those emergency care
practitioners within operational (72.1%) and managerial (15.6%) roles constituted the
largest proportion of those who eschewed postgraduate education.
Structural conditions owing to the paucity of financial incentives (86%), support (57%)
and career progression pathways (92%) predominantly motivated emergency care
practitioners within the South African prehospital milieu to eschew postgraduate
education. Cultural conditions motivated emergency care practitioners, regardless of
location or area of speciality, to pursue postgraduate education. The constructs of the
individual or collectively held ideals, beliefs, and values were identified as the cultural
conditions, which are not easy to change and have lasting conditional influence among
emergency care practitioners.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, the study established and presented, from the emergency care
practitioners’ point of view, the cultural and structural conditions that influence their
agency: motivations to pursue or eschew postgraduate education. The findings highlight
the structural and cultural dynamic and interchangeable nature and the overlap of the
prehospital milieu's values, practices and behaviours. It notably identified the
interconnections as all the practices and behaviours underpinned by the motivations
emerging from the prehospital milieu. The study further demonstrated that a
comprehensive and deeper understanding of how individuals interpret their structural and
cultural conditions, is essential. The objective goal of developing the profession is

interlinked with establishing institutional and cultural norms that capacitate and support
those within the profession.
Description: 
A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy in Emergency Medical Care, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2024.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/5369
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/5369
Appears in Collections:Theses and dissertations (Health Sciences)

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