Maximizing the Benefits and Minimizing the Risks from the Contribution of “Outsiders” to the Development of Services for Persons with Communication Disability in Sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract

Abstract Background: Services for persons with communication disability are scarce in many low- and middle-income countries, including most countries in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Speech–language therapists (SLTs) from high-income countries have long been involved in supporting service developments in SSA. This has often been through short-, medium-, or long-term posts (e.g., through individuals being employed by nongovernmental organizations, working as volunteer expatriates, or being locally employed), delivering direct services to clients and their families, training other professionals, and/or educating SLTs. Consultants working on a short-term basis advise universities and government ministries on the establishment of speech–language therapy (SLT) services and educational programs. There is some professional literature guiding SLTs from high-income countries on how to prepare for such work, but little has been written about what low- and middle-income country-based professionals, clients, or their families think about or would like from outsider SLTs. Furthermore, there is little or no evidence indicating what makes outsider support successful. Methodology: Two SLTs, with a combined experience of over 40 years (a Ghanaian SLT and an SLT based in the UK with considerable experience working in low- and middle-income countries), present a written dialogue about insiders and outsiders working together in low- and middle-income country contexts. Four fictitious case examples of outsider-insider experiences of collaboration are then given, illustrating points made in the dialogue. The third author then reports on part of her PhD study of an SLT insider-outsider collaboration in Uganda. Results/Discussion: Learning from all three sections and the previously published literature is then used to generate recommendations for maximizing the benefits of insider-outsider SLT collaborations in low- and middle-income countries.

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Book chapter review

Citation

Marshall, J., Owusu, N.A.V., Sowden, R. (2023). Maximizing the Benefits and Minimizing the Risks from the Contribution of “Outsiders” to the Development of Services for Persons with Communication Disability in Sub-Saharan Africa. In: Lüdtke, U.M., Kija, E., Karia, M.K. (eds) Handbook of Speech-Language Therapy in Sub-Saharan Africa. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-04504-2_3

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