The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies

Background: Healthcare professions in South Africa are regulated through legislative bodies such as the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) towards the protection of the public. Professional associations, on the other hand, enhance professional practice aspirations and advocate for re...

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Main Authors: Simon A. Maluleke, Vanessa R. Moodley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2022-12-01
Series:African Vision and Eye Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://avehjournal.org/index.php/aveh/article/view/730
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author Simon A. Maluleke
Vanessa R. Moodley
author_facet Simon A. Maluleke
Vanessa R. Moodley
author_sort Simon A. Maluleke
collection DOAJ
description Background: Healthcare professions in South Africa are regulated through legislative bodies such as the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) towards the protection of the public. Professional associations, on the other hand, enhance professional practice aspirations and advocate for recognition of their profession and membership that is voluntary in nature. These specific mandates are sometimes confused or conflated by the profession. Aim: To assess practitioner perceptions on the role and relevance of optometric professional and regulatory bodies in South Africa. Setting: The study was conducted amongst practicing optometrists and dispensing opticians in South Africa. Methods: A cross-sectional, descriptive study that used a quantitative approach involving 208 optometric professionals was conducted via an online survey. Results: Approximately two-thirds (65.5%) of the 208 respondents, 65.0% of whom were members of the South African Optometric Association (SAOA), believed that the SAOA is relevant. However, more respondents (72.9%) in the sample believed that the HPCSA was relevant, the majority (56.1%) of whom were also SAOA members. Most respondents did not believe that either the SAOA (68.0%) or the HPCSA (61.0%) protects the practice of optometry. A lack of action against perceived negative practices of optometry networks and violations by registered and unregistered individuals emerged as strong reasons for dissatisfaction amongst respondents. High membership fees were cited as a membership deterrent by 67.0% of non-SAOA members. Despite reporting adequate knowledge of the SAOA (84.7%) and HPCSA (94.6%), factual assessment revealed only 42.4% and 69.5% were accurate on the respective mandates of the two organisations. Conclusion: Although many practitioners were unclear of the actual mandates of both the SAOA and HPCSA, they believed that both bodies were relevant and should improve advocacy and sanctioning of errant practitioners within the optometric arena in South Africa.
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spelling doaj.art-100c7c441537446c9b39ee41af16a7a82022-12-22T10:17:53ZengAOSISAfrican Vision and Eye Health2413-31832410-15162022-12-01811e1e810.4102/aveh.v81i1.730531The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodiesSimon A. Maluleke0Vanessa R. Moodley1Department of Optometry, School of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, DurbanDepartment of Optometry, School of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, DurbanBackground: Healthcare professions in South Africa are regulated through legislative bodies such as the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) towards the protection of the public. Professional associations, on the other hand, enhance professional practice aspirations and advocate for recognition of their profession and membership that is voluntary in nature. These specific mandates are sometimes confused or conflated by the profession. Aim: To assess practitioner perceptions on the role and relevance of optometric professional and regulatory bodies in South Africa. Setting: The study was conducted amongst practicing optometrists and dispensing opticians in South Africa. Methods: A cross-sectional, descriptive study that used a quantitative approach involving 208 optometric professionals was conducted via an online survey. Results: Approximately two-thirds (65.5%) of the 208 respondents, 65.0% of whom were members of the South African Optometric Association (SAOA), believed that the SAOA is relevant. However, more respondents (72.9%) in the sample believed that the HPCSA was relevant, the majority (56.1%) of whom were also SAOA members. Most respondents did not believe that either the SAOA (68.0%) or the HPCSA (61.0%) protects the practice of optometry. A lack of action against perceived negative practices of optometry networks and violations by registered and unregistered individuals emerged as strong reasons for dissatisfaction amongst respondents. High membership fees were cited as a membership deterrent by 67.0% of non-SAOA members. Despite reporting adequate knowledge of the SAOA (84.7%) and HPCSA (94.6%), factual assessment revealed only 42.4% and 69.5% were accurate on the respective mandates of the two organisations. Conclusion: Although many practitioners were unclear of the actual mandates of both the SAOA and HPCSA, they believed that both bodies were relevant and should improve advocacy and sanctioning of errant practitioners within the optometric arena in South Africa.https://avehjournal.org/index.php/aveh/article/view/730advocacyregulatory bodiesprofessional associationshpcsasaoaoptometristdispensing opticians
spellingShingle Simon A. Maluleke
Vanessa R. Moodley
The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies
African Vision and Eye Health
advocacy
regulatory bodies
professional associations
hpcsa
saoa
optometrist
dispensing opticians
title The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies
title_full The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies
title_fullStr The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies
title_full_unstemmed The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies
title_short The perceived role and relevance of South African optometric professional and regulatory bodies
title_sort perceived role and relevance of south african optometric professional and regulatory bodies
topic advocacy
regulatory bodies
professional associations
hpcsa
saoa
optometrist
dispensing opticians
url https://avehjournal.org/index.php/aveh/article/view/730
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