TY - JOUR
T1 - Planning health education
T2 - Internet and computer resources in Southwestern Nigeria
AU - Oyadoke, Adebola A.
AU - Salami, Kabiru K.
AU - Brieger, William R.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - The use of the Internet as a health, education, tool and as a resource in health, education planning is widely accepted as the norm in industrialized, countries. Unfortunately, access to computers and the Internet is quite limited in developing countries. Not all licensed service providers operate, many users are actually foreign, nationals, telephone connections are unreliable, and electricity supplies are intermittent. In this context, computer, e-mail, Internet, and CD-Rom use by health and health education program officers in five states in, southwestern Nigeria were assessed, to document their present, access and, use. Eight of the 30 organizations visited were government health ministry departments, while the remainder were non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Six NGOs and four State Ministry of Health (MOH) departments had no computers, but nearly two-thirds of both types of agency had e-mail, less than, one-third had Web browsing facilities, and six had CD-Roms, all of whom were NGOs. Only 25 of the 48 individual respondents had computer use skills. Narrative responses from, individual employees showed a qualitative difference between computer and Internet access and use and type of agency. NGO staff in, organizations with computers indicated having relatively free access to a computer and, the Internet and used these for both program planning and administrative purposes. In government offices it appeared that computers were more likely to be located in administrative or statistics offices and used for management tasks like salaries and correspondence, limiting the access of individual health, staff. These two different organizational cultures must be considered when plans are made for increasing computer availability and skills for health education planning.
AB - The use of the Internet as a health, education, tool and as a resource in health, education planning is widely accepted as the norm in industrialized, countries. Unfortunately, access to computers and the Internet is quite limited in developing countries. Not all licensed service providers operate, many users are actually foreign, nationals, telephone connections are unreliable, and electricity supplies are intermittent. In this context, computer, e-mail, Internet, and CD-Rom use by health and health education program officers in five states in, southwestern Nigeria were assessed, to document their present, access and, use. Eight of the 30 organizations visited were government health ministry departments, while the remainder were non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Six NGOs and four State Ministry of Health (MOH) departments had no computers, but nearly two-thirds of both types of agency had e-mail, less than, one-third had Web browsing facilities, and six had CD-Roms, all of whom were NGOs. Only 25 of the 48 individual respondents had computer use skills. Narrative responses from, individual employees showed a qualitative difference between computer and Internet access and use and type of agency. NGO staff in, organizations with computers indicated having relatively free access to a computer and, the Internet and used these for both program planning and administrative purposes. In government offices it appeared that computers were more likely to be located in administrative or statistics offices and used for management tasks like salaries and correspondence, limiting the access of individual health, staff. These two different organizational cultures must be considered when plans are made for increasing computer availability and skills for health education planning.
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U2 - 10.2190/G246-8867-0246-21M5
DO - 10.2190/G246-8867-0246-21M5
M3 - Article
C2 - 17686702
AN - SCOPUS:34547167814
SN - 0272-684X
VL - 25
SP - 169
EP - 183
JO - International Quarterly of Community Health Education
JF - International Quarterly of Community Health Education
IS - 1-2
ER -