BackgroundTo continue delivering the courses despite school closure during the covid-19 pandemic, the University of Rwanda abruptly shifted its teaching from traditional physical to online teaching. This was the compulsory medium of teaching during the lockdown period. This sudden change did not allow for adequate preparation for students. ObjectivesTo assess the preparation of learners to use the e-learning platform, and to explore the factors that enabled or inhibited learners’ use of the e-learning platform. MethodThis was a cross-sectional quantitative research design study done between June and July 2020. An online questionnaire was sent to all students registered in the College of Medicine and Health Sciences for the academic year 2019-2020. ResultsA total of 446 students completed the questionnaire. Students reported not being adequately oriented and unprepared to effectively use e-learning. Students were motivated to use e-learning when the learning objectives were clear, interactive, with engaging materials. Inadequate e-learning infrastructure, limited access to internet connectivity and inadequate devices were identified as the strongest barriers of using e-learning. ConclusionThe covid-19 pandemic has brought a transformational opportunity to embrace a blended learning approach. To sustain such a transformation, proper and timely planning and strategies need to be invested.
Rwanda J Med Health Sci 2022;5(1):99-112
Background The department of Mental Health Nursing (MHN) at the University of Rwanda was founded in 1998.Until that time, Rwanda had faced a huge shortage of mental health professionals; specifically, there were 1 psychiatrist, 3 mental health nurses and very few clinical psychologists (less than 5) in the country. The purpose of creating the Mental Health Nursing program was to foster the mental well-being of Rwandans who survived the tragic events related to the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.The aim of this study was to evaluate the MHN graduates' work place settings in relationship to mental health needs in Rwanda. This was a descriptive study. The respondents were graduates from 2000-2014 and the collection of data related to their workplace was made using phone calls to all former students. About 326 out of 348 (93.67%) were reached and for the 22 (6.32%) we did not manage to get information about them. Results Since its existence, the department has graduated 348 mental health nurses at the A1 level who are integrated in the national existing pyramidal structure of care. The employment rate was 90.79 % and most of them were working in hospitals: 26.43% in district hospitals and 24.13% in referral hospitals Conclusion The current professional placements of the mental health nursing workforce in Rwanda ascertain that these placements correlate with the National Mental Health Policy. All structures of the national health system are provided but they are far from reaching the grassroots level and mental health needs of the population, 26, 1% of which had PTSD. Further placement of MHN must reinforce the community level, including Health Centers.
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