| Literature DB >> 25274645 |
Abstract
As a key principle of Primary Health Care (PHC) and Health Systems Reform, community participation has a prominent place in the current global dialogue. Participation is not only promoted in the context of provision and utilization of health services. Advocates also highlight participation as a key factor in the wider context of the importance of social determinants of health and health as a human right. However, the evidence that directly links community participation to improved health status is not strong. Its absence continues to be a barrier for governments, funding agencies and health professionals to promote community participation. The purpose of this article is to review research seeking to link community participation with improved health status outcomes programmes. It updates a review undertaken by the author in 2009. The search includes published articles in the English language and examines the evidence of in the context of health care delivery including services and promotion where health professionals have defined the community's role. The results show that in most studies community participation is defined as the intervention seeking to identify a direct causal link between participation and improved health status modeled on Randomized Control studies (RCT). The majority of studies show it is not possible to examine the link because there is no standard definition of 'community' and 'participation'. Where links are found, they are situation-specific and are unpredictable and not generalizable. In the discussion, an alternative research framework is proposed arguing that community participation is better understood as a process. Once concrete interventions are identified (i.e. improved birth outcomes) then the processes producing improved health status outcomes can be examined. These processes may include and can lead to community uptake, ownership and sustainability for health improvements. However, more research is needed to ensure their validity. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineEntities:
Keywords: Community participation; evidence-based policy; health care reform; health outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25274645 PMCID: PMC4202913 DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czu076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Policy Plan ISSN: 0268-1080 Impact factor: 3.344
Table of reviews examined
| Review | Purpose/aim | Key findings |
|---|---|---|
| Update findings on lessons about community participation in health | - CHWs contributed to the reduction in maternal and child mortality rates | |
| Evidence of CHW programmes on Bhutta Millennium Development Goals (MDG); Maternal and child health interventions | - Decrease in the burden and costs of TB and malaria | |
| Scale-up and integrate CHW in the national health systems; Maternal and child health interventions | CHWs can improve health seeking behaviour and provide low-cost maternal and child health interventions; cost of CHW subsystem is estimated to be $2.62 per capita, and a programme cost of $3584 per CHW | |
| Reviews broad set of interventions; role of health systems and the community | CHWs can successfully deliver a range of preventive and curative services to improve health outcomes; - Number of factors influence CHW performance, including CHW, community characteristics; service mix, contextual factors and community are involved in CHW support activities | |
| Review of literature, expert opinion; | CHWs highly effective in promoting breastfeeding; treating childhood pneumonia, diarrhoea and malaria; reducing maternal and child mortality | |
| Systematic review of community participation in the control of Chagas disease | Participation enhances control of disease but further evidence is necessary | |
| Systematic review of role of women’s participatory groups in improving birth outcomes | Women’s groups are cost-effective and improve birth outcomes rapidly on a large scale | |
| Systematic review of the role of community in communicable disease control with malaria as a case study | Challenges of lack of definition for ‘community’ and ‘participation’ and poor understanding of the constructs of participation and a “peoples’ component” in control programmes | |
| Systematic review of evidence of community participation and improvements in rural health outcomes | Lack of evidence of direct link but this did not mean lack of effect; need to improve understanding of participation in terms of time and financing and need tools to measure and understand participation | |
| Systematic review of evidence of effects of community participation on improving skilled care for maternal and newborn health | Found very few high quality studies and none that answered question of why interventions succeed or fail; need qualitative component to study ‘complex interventions’ as part of RTCs | |
| Review of community participation in health planning, resource allocation and service delivery from published and grey literature | Barrier to evidence is lack of standard definition of ‘community’ and ‘participation’; contribution of participation depends on many factors including system factors and socio-cultural factors; lack of data to make generalizations | |
| Systematic review of health service committees | Barriers to evidence is lack of standard definition of ‘community’ and ‘participation’; lack of data for robust analysis; cannot confirm external validity; outcomes depend on process and context | |
| Review of literature on community accountability at peripheral health facilities | Accountability depended on political interests, response to funding, selection, support from local and national government and relationships in committees and with other groups, health providers and managers | |
| Systematic review of impact of participatory approaches on UK public health units on health and social outcomes | Little evidence of a direct link between participatory approaches and a ‘noteworthy’ impact on health and social outcomes | |
| Systematic review of community engagement on health and social outcomes | No evidence on population health or quality of services but some positive impact on housing, crime, social capital and community empowerment |