| Literature DB >> 25245825 |
Joseph Mumba Zulu1, John Kinsman, Charles Michelo, Anna-Karin Hurtig.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the development of national community-based health worker (CBHW) programmes in several low- and middle-income countries, their integration into health systems has not been optimal. Studies have been conducted to investigate the factors influencing the integration processes, but systematic reviews to provide a more comprehensive understanding are lacking.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25245825 PMCID: PMC4192351 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-987
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Conceptual framework for analysing integration process (adopted from Atun et al. [22] ).
Definition of integration status
| Integration status | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Selected health systems elements
[ | Full integration | Partial integration | Not integrated |
| Governance and leadership | Management and supervision of CBHWs is conducted by other health workers and institutions in the ministry of health | Management and supervision of CBHWs is not completely conducted by other health workers and institutions in the ministry of health. Private stakeholders such as NGOs are also involved | CBHWs do not receive any supervision from other health workers and institutions in the ministry of health |
| Financial resources | CBHWs are part of the civil service and are paid standardised monthly salaries by the government | CBHWs are not part of civil service, but receive standardised incentives from the government | CBHWs are not part of the civil and do not have standardised incentives from the government |
| Human resources | CBHWs receive standardised training from the ministry of health and are fully accepted as well as supported by other health workers | CBHWs receive standardised training from the ministry of health but are not fully accepted by some health workers | CBHWs do not receive any form of standardised training from the ministry of health and are not recognised by other health workers |
| Service delivery | CBHWs perform standardised tasks; stakeholders recognise, accept and utilise the services provided the CBHWs | CBHWs perform standardised tasks; but some stakeholders do not recognise, accept and utilise the services provided the CBHWs | CBHWs do not have standardised tasks and duties |
| Population | CBHWs are recruited from the community and are recognised and accepted by the community | CBHWs are recruited from the community but are discriminated or not accepted by part of the community | Not all CBHWs are recruited and work within their community and most community members do not recognise or accept CBHWs |
| Outcomes and Goals | CBHW services and duties are in line with the national primary health care system | CBHW services and duties are not in line with all of issues contained in the national primary health care system | CBHW duties and services are not developed based on the national primary health care system |
Search outcomes for literature about national Community-Based Health Worker programmes
| Data Source | Countries | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | Ethiopia | India | Pakistan | Total | |
| The Cochrane Collaboration | 48 | ||||
| Web of science | 5 | 43 | 21 | 31 | 100 |
| PubMed | 245 | 38 | 13 | 58 | 354 |
| Medline | 8 | 40 | 35 | 44 | 127 |
| Biomed Central | 194 | 56 | 45 | 39 | 334 |
| CINAHL | 32 | 9 | 2 | 18 | 61 |
| Science direct | 15 | 1115 | 33 | 350 | 1513 |
| References and WHO websites | 426 | 243 | 37 | 167 | 873 |
| Sub Totals | 925 | 1544 | 186 | 707 | |
Figure 2Search strategy and paper selection flow chart.
Selected factors influencing the integration process
| Integration condition | Factors influencing integration process |
|---|---|
| Characteristics of the problem | Human Resource for Health problem |
| Discourse about Human Resource for Health problem | |
| Discourse about CBHWs | |
| Attributes of the intervention | Service delivery |
| Performance of CBHWs | |
| Adopting system | Politicians and professional health workers programme perceptions |
| Community members programme perceptions | |
| Health system characteristics | Training systems for CBHWs |
| Supervision process for CBHW | |
| Incentive structure for CBHWs | |
| Broad context | Demographic factors |
| Economic factors | |
| Socio-cultural factors |
Study characteristics
| N o | 1 stAuthor/Year [Citations] | Country | Study type/ design | Type of CBHWs | Aim | Key issues/findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| 1 | Svitone [ | Brazil | Review | CHAs | To document primary health care lessons from the Northeast of Brazil following the implementation of CHAs Programme | Comprehensive information available, a decline in infant mortality, a rise in immunization, and timely interventions in times of crisis |
| 2 | Macinko [ | Brazil | Program Evaluation | CHAs | To assess the effects of an integrated community-based primary care programme on microregional variations in infant mortality (IMR), neonatal mortality, and post-neonatal mortality rates from 1999 to 2004 | Results show that infant mortality rate declined about 13 percent from 1999 to 2004, while Family Health Program coverage increased from an average of about 14 to nearly 60 percent |
| 3 | Aquino [ | Brazil | Program Evaluation | CHAs | To evaluate the effects of the Family Health Programme (FHP) on infant mortality at a municipality level | The FHP had an important effect on reducing the infant mortality rate in Brazilian municipalities from 1996 to 2004. The FHP may also contribute toward reducing health inequalities |
|
| Zanchetta [ | Brazil | Mixed methods | CHAs | To assessing the effectiveness of CHAs' actions in situations of social vulnerability | Barriers to CHAs' effectiveness included professional powerlessness, communication gaps, fragmented teamwork, organizational and structural barriers |
|
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|
| Girma [ | Ethiopia | Review | HEWs | To understand implications of strategies for human resource development (HRD) by 2015 | The process to develop policy and strategy for managing human resource for health has been started |
|
| Negusse [ | Ethiopia | Mixed methods | HEWs | To document the initial community perspectives on the Health Service Extension Programme in Welkait | HEWs are helpful, HEWs are more preferred over TBAs, HEWs provide good health services. Limitations: less visits, poor knowledge on major communicable diseases |
|
| Teklehaimanot [ | Ethiopia | Qualitative | HEWs | To assess the working conditions of HEWs in Ethiopia and their job satisfaction | Health indicators have improved, performance in skilled delivery and postnatal care not satisfactory. Limited quality of service, utilization rate, access, referrals and programme evaluation |
|
| Admassie [ | Ethiopia | Program Evaluation | HEWs | To evaluate the short-term and intermediate-term impacts of the HEW programme on child and maternal health indicators in the programme villages | The proportion of children and women using insecticide-treated bednets for malaria protection are significantly larger in programme villages than in non-programme villages |
|
| Koblinsky [ | Ethiopia | Review | HEWs | To explore Ethiopia’s progress toward achieving MDG 5 through the Health Extension Programme | Achieving the set targets is a daunting task despite reaching the physical targets of two health extension workers per health post |
|
| Damtew [ | Ethiopia | Qualitative (Case study) | HEWs | To examine conditions that may affect the quality of HEWs training in Ethiopia | Training inadequacies |
|
| Medhanyie [ | Ethiopia | Mixed methods | HEWs | To investigate the Knowledge and performance of the HEWs on antenatal and delivery care as well as the barriers and facilitators to service provision | Poor knowledge of HEWs, poorly equipped health posts, and poor referral systems affected acceptability of services |
|
| Medhanyie [ | Ethiopia | Program Evaluation | HEWs | To assess the role of HEWs in improving utilization of maternal health services in rural areas in Ethiopia | Better utilization of family planning, antenatal care etc. Limited contribution to health facility delivery, postnatal check-up etc. |
|
| Birhanu [ | Ethiopia | Mixed methods | HEWs | To assess mothers’ experiences and satisfaction with health extension service | Most mothers had good relationships, were satisfied with and had positive attitude towards HEWs. Programme was however criticized for not including curative services and the less attention given to static services at health post |
|
| Teklehaimanot [ | Ethiopia | Qualitative (Case study) | HEWs | To describe the strategies, human resource developments, service delivery modalities, progress in service coverage, and the challenges in implementing the HEP | Health system reformed to create a platform for integration/ institutionalization of the HEP with appropriate human capacity, infrastructure, and management structures |
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| Scott [ | India | Qualitative (Case study) | ASHAs | To investigate the contextual features hindering the ASHAs' capacity to increase quantitative health outcomes and act as cultural mediators and agents of social change | SHAs limited by: (1) the outcome-based remuneration structure; (2) poor institutional support; (3) the rigid hierarchical structure of the health system; and (4) a dearth of participation at the community level |
|
| Gopalan [ | India | Mixed-methods | ASHAs | To examine the performance motivation of community health workers (CHWs) and its determinants on India's Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA) programme | Performance motivation mainly influenced by the individual and the community level factors, while the health system factors scored the least |
|
| Kumar [ | India | Program Evaluation | ASHAs | To study the factors influencing the work performance of ASHAs in community | Limitations included less knowledge, caste system, limited incentive practices and inadequate incentives |
|
| Shrivastava [ | India | Mixed-methods | ASHAs | To evaluate the knowledge, attitudes and practices of ASHA workers in relation to child health | Gaps still exists in ASHAs’ knowledge regarding various aspects of child health morbidity |
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| Afsar [ | Pakistan | Program Evaluation | LHWs | To estimate the proportion of patient referral and to identify the factors associated with unsuccessful referral in Karachi, Pakistan | Limited communication and counselling skills of LHWs contributed to significant proportion of unsuccessful referrals |
|
| Afsar [ | Pakistan | Qualitative | LHWs | To assess the strengths and weakness of the National Programme for Family Planning and Primary Health Care from the LHWs’ perspectives | Strengths: Some community members accepting LHWs. Weaknesses: contractual job, low salaries, irregular payment, no career development and poor logistical support |
|
| Douthwaite [ | Pakistan | Mixed methods | LHWs | To evaluate the Lady Health Worker programme | The LHWP has succeeded in increasing modern contraceptive use among rural women |
|
| Haq [ | Pakistan | Mixed methods | LHWs | To evaluate job stress among community health workers in Pakistan | Challenges: stress, low socio-economic status, long distances; inadequate, medical supplies, stipends, communication skills, lack of career structure |
|
| Haq [ | Pakistan | Qualitative | LHWs | To document the perceptions of LHWs on their knowledge and communication needs, image building | Many respondents described their communication skills as moderately sufficient. Knowledge on emerging health issues was insufficient |
|
| Hafeez [ | Pakistan | Mixed methods | LHWs | To review the LHW programme and explore various aspects of the process to extract tangible implications for other similar situations | Improved community links with first level care facilities, earned community trust. Limitations: poor support from sub-optimal health facilities, financial constraints and political interference |
|
| Mumtaz [ | Pakistan | Mixed-methods | LHWs | To explore the impact of socio-cultural factors on LHWs' home-visit rates | Performance is constrained by both gender and biradari/caste-based hierarchies. |
|
| Wazir [ | Pakistan | Review | LHWs | To conduct a SWOT analysis of the National Program for Family Planning and Primary Health Care in Pakistan |
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| Hermann [ | Ethiopia and others | Review | HEWs | To investigate whether present CBHW programmes for ART are taking into account the lessons learnt from past experiences and analyse the extent to which they are seizing the new ART-specific opportunities | Adequate remuneration key to CBHW retention. Sufficient attention to be given to supervision, continuous training and health systems strengthening |
|
| Celletti [ | Brazil, Ethiopia, etc. | Qualitative | CHAs HEWs | To evaluate the contribution of CHWs with a focus on identifying the critical elements of an enabling environment that can ensure that they provide quality services in a manner that is sustainable | Important requirements include adequate systems integration, political commitment; good planning, definition of scope of practice, selection, educational issues, career path, registration, licensure and certification; recruitment and deployment; adequate remuneration, supervision; referral system; supplies |
|
| Kane [ | Brazil, Ethiopia, India, Pakistan, | Realist synthesis (Review) | CHAs, HEWs, ASHAs, LHWs | To explore if randomised controlled trails could yield insight into the working of the interventions, when examined from a different perspective, a realist perspective | Positive mechanisms: anticipation of being valued; perceived improved social status; sense of relatedness with the health system; increased self esteem, sense of self efficacy, enactive mastery of tasks; sense of credibility, legitimacy |
|
| Lewin [ | Brazil, Ethiopia, India, Pakistan, | Systematic review | CHAs, HEWs, ASHAs, LHWs | To assess the effects of LHW interventions in primary and community health care on maternal and child health and the management of infectious diseases | LHWs provide promising benefits in promoting immunisation uptake and breastfeeding, improving TB treatment outcomes, and reducing child morbidity and mortality when compared to usual care |
|
| Liu [ | Brazil, Ethiopia, India, Pakistan, | Review | CHAs, HEWs, ASHAs, LHWs | To explore CBHW programmes that have been deployed at national scale, as well as scalable innovations found in successful nongovernmental organization-run community health worker programmes | Ability by national CBWH programmes to reach scale is impressive, but quality and management challenging. If well managed programmes integrated into a well-functioning primary healthcare system can promote care and act as an effective link |
|
| Wouters [ | Ethiopia and others | Synthetic review | HEWs | To review the impact of community-based support services on ART delivery and outcomes in resource-limited countries | CBHWs are not necessarily cheap or easy, a good investment to improve coverage of communities in need of health services |
|
| Jaskiewicz [ | Ethiopia Pakistan and others | Review | HEWs LHWs | To review the influence of work environment in increasing community health worker productivity and effectiveness | Essential elements for improving productivity: defined workload, supportive supervision, supplies and equipment, and respect from the community and the health system |
|
| Balabanova [ | Ethiopia, etc. | Review | HEWs, etc. | To discuss why some countries or regions achieve better health and social outcomes than others at a similar level of income and to show the role of political will and socially progressive policies | Attributes of success included good governance, political commitment, effective bureaucracies, ability to innovate and adapt to resource limitations, the capacity to respond to population needs and build resilience into health systems to face challenges. Transport infrastructure, female empowerment, and education also played a part |
|
| Glenton [ | Brazil, Ethiopia, India, Pakistan, | Systematic review | CHAs, HEWs, ASHAs, LHWs | To explore factors affecting the implementation of LHW programmes for maternal and child health | Barriers and facilitators were mainly tied to programme acceptability, appropriateness and credibility; and health system constraints |
|
| Perry [ | Brazil and others | Review | CHAs | To summarize the history, recent evolution, and current evidence of the effectiveness of CHWs around the world | CBHWs promote healthy behaviors, extend reach of health systems, help address health workforce resources shortage, and reduce health disparities |
Integration status of national CBHW programmes
| Name of CBHW programme and integration status | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health systems elements
[ | CHA-Brazil
[ | LHWs-Pakistan
[ | HEWs –Ethiopia
[ | ASHAs- India
[ |
| Governance and leadership | Full integration | Full integration | Full integration | Partial integration |
| Financial resources | Full integration | Full integration | Full integration | Partial integration |
| Human resources | Partial integration | Partial integration | Full integration | Partial integration |
| Service delivery | Partial integration | Partial integration | Partial integration | Partial integration |
| Population | Full integration | Partial integration | Partial integration | Partial integration |
| Outcomes | Full integration | Full integration | Full integration | Full integration |
| Goals | Full integration | Full integration | Full integration | Full integration |
Summary of national scale programmes
| Country | CBHW programme | Roles | Incentives | Supervision |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | Community Health Assistants (CHAs) | Promoting breastfeeding as well as providing prenatal, child care, immunizations, screening and treatment of infectious diseases services | From $100 to $228 per month | - Done through family health care teams |
| - About 240,000 CHAs | - Teams consist of nurses and physicians from the local clinics | |||
| - Launched in 1991 | - 33,000 family health care teams | |||
| Pakistan | Lady Health Worker (LHWs) | Supporting maternal and child health services, which include family planning, HIV/AIDS and treatment of minor illnesses. Providing health education, essential drugs for minor ailments, contraceptives, vaccination and making referrals | $343 per year | Conducted by Lady Health Worker supervisor |
| - About 90,000 LHWs | ||||
| - Launched in 1992. | ||||
| Ethiopia | Health Extension Workers (HEWs) | Providing basic first aid, contraceptives, and immunizations, as well as diagnosing and treating malaria, diarrhoea, and intestinal parasites | About $84 monthly | Conducted by district team comprising health officer, a public health nurse, an environmental technician and health education expert |
| - About 34,000 HEWs | ||||
| - Launched in 2003 | ||||
| India | Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) | Community mobilisation, motivating women to give birth at health posts, promoting immunisations, family planning, treating basic illness, keeping demographic records, and improving village sanitation. | About 600 rupees ($10) for facilitating an institutional delivery, and 150 rupees ($2.50) for each child that successfully completes immunisation session | Conducted by ASHA facilitators |
| - About 800,000 (ASHAs) | ||||
| - Launched in 2005 |
Figure 3Factors influencing integration of national CBHWs in health systems.