| Literature DB >> 22024435 |
Jason B Christopher1, Alex Le May, Simon Lewin, David A Ross.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over thirty years have passed since the Alma-Ata Declaration on primary health care in 1978. Many governments in the first decade following the declaration responded by developing national programmes of community health workers (CHWs), but evaluations of these often demonstrated poor outcomes. As many CHW programmes have responded to the HIV/AIDS pandemic, international interest in them has returned and their role in the response to other diseases should be examined carefully so that lessons can be applied to their new roles. Over half of the deaths in African children under five years of age are due to malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia - a situation which could be addressed through the use of cheap and effective interventions delivered by CHWs. However, to date there is very little evidence from randomised controlled trials of the impacts of CHW programmes on child mortality in Africa. Evidence from non-randomised controlled studies has not previously been reviewed systematically.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22024435 PMCID: PMC3214180 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-9-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Figure 1Literature search chart. CBA: Controlled before and after study.
Characteristics and Findings of Studies
| Study | Setting | CHW programme | Intervention tested | Study design | Period when impact measured | Change in mortality (95% CIs) | Change in morbidity (95% CIs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North bank of river, Gambia. | National programme | 13 CHWs delivering curative treatments, health education & malaria chemoprophylaxis | CBA | 9-21 months after CHWs began delivering anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis | 36% (-17, 63) reduction 1-4 yr old mortality | 84% (48, 95) reduction in fever and parasitaemia | |
| North bank of river, Gambia. | National programme | 13 CHWs delivering curative treatments, health education & malaria chemoprophylaxis | CBA | 3-4 yrs after CHWs began delivering anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis | 77% (51, 89) reduction in 1-4 yr old mortality | 84% (60, 94) reduction in fever and parasitaemia | |
| North bank of River Gambia. | National programme | 1 CHW & TBA per village (15 villages) Curative treatments & health education delivered. | CBA | Mortality measured in four successive 2-3 yr periods after programme onset in 1983, covering 14 years. | 33% (10, 50) reduction in 1-4 yr old mortality, 6 to 9 yrs after programme onset. | Not assessed | |
| South bank of river, Gambia. | National programme | 1 CHW & TBA per village (17 villages) delivering ITNs, curative treatments & health education | CBA | 0-12 months following initiation of ITN delivery by CHWs | 63% (32, 80) reduction in 1-4 yr old mortality | Not assessed | |
| North Ghana. | Initiated by research institute | CHWs delivering health education, curative treatments, making referrals | Cluster RCT | 4-5 years after CHWs rolled out | 87% (27, 178) increase in 1-2 yr old mortality | Not assessed | |
| South Ghana. Rural | Initiated by research institute | Curative treatments & growth monitoring by 6 CHWs, 1 nurse & 1 physician. | Before and after study | 0-3 years after programme onset. | 61% (no CIs given) reduction in 0-4 yr old mortality, 36 months after programme onset | Not assessed | |
| Coast of Benin. | National programme | 17 CHWs. Tasks included home visits, curative treatments, anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis, health education, growth monitoring, and referrals. | Case control study | Cases (deaths) & controls were assessed for exposure to CHWs in the preceding 3-year period | OR = 0.39 (0.16, 0.97) | Not assessed | |
CHW: Community Health Worker; RCT: Randomized Controlled Trial
ITN: Insecticide-treated nets; NGO: Non-governmental organisation
TBA: Traditional birth attendant; CBA: Controlled before and after study
OR: Odds ratio of death in children exposed to CHW compared to those unexposed