| Literature DB >> 26323276 |
Joseph F Naimoli1, Henry B Perry2, John W Townsend3, Diana E Frymus4, James A McCaffery5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is robust evidence that community health workers (CHWs) in low- and middle-income (LMIC) countries can improve their clients' health and well-being. The evidence on proven strategies to enhance and sustain CHW performance at scale, however, is limited. Nevertheless, CHW stakeholders need guidance and new ideas, which can emerge from the recognition that CHWs function at the intersection of two dynamic, overlapping systems - the formal health system and the community. Although each typically supports CHWs, their support is not necessarily strategic, collaborative or coordinated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26323276 PMCID: PMC4556219 DOI: 10.1186/s12960-015-0041-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Key definitions
| Keywords | Definition |
|---|---|
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| A health worker who receives limited standardized training outside the formal nursing or medical curricula to deliver a range of basic health, promotional, educational and mobilization services and has a defined role within the community system and larger health system. This label applies to a heterogeneous cadre of frontline health workers operating in a diverse set of countries and contexts. For example, in some countries, a CHW may be a full-time, paid employee of the government, while in other countries, he or she may be an unpaid, full- or part-time volunteer supported by an NGO. Both types of CHW may be present in the same country. |
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| All people, institutions, resources and activities whose purpose is to promote, restore and/or maintain health [ |
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| A social group comprising both kin and non-kin social networks that share a sense of connectedness – through shared values, common interests and/or adherence to norms of reciprocity – and which perceives itself as distinct in some respect from the larger society in which it resides [ |
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| Quality CHW programming comprises a wide range of support activities that explicitly target CHWs and are undertaken by a range of actors in the health system and the community. We have subsumed these support activities, for both the health system and the community, under three common rubrics: technical support, social support and incentives. Technical support includes efforts to design well-functioning CHW programmes that deliver, through sound implementation and management, high impact, evidence-based interventions, monitor adequacy of implementation and evaluate effectiveness. Social support includes fostering partnerships, strengthening linkages with various health and community system actors and entities that can support CHWs in their efforts and providing opportunities for CHWs to interact and support one another. Incentives encompass non-financial, in-kind and financial inducements (including salaries) that are commonly used to motivate CHWs to enhance and sustain their performance. |
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| We define CHW performance in relation to the specific roles and responsibilities of CHWs in a given context in three ways: outputs, outcomes and impact. |
Summary of illustrative challenges and potential responses, by strategy
| Strategy | Illustrative challenge | Potential response |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Joint ownership and design of CHW programmes | Overcoming resistance from established interests | • Capitalize on health sector decentralization to build mutual respect and trust among CHWs and the many community and health system actors |
| • Mobilize community and health system leaders accountable to the entire community | ||
| • Establish explicit structures and processes for community and health system collaboration | ||
| 2. Collaborative supervision and constructive feedback | Engaging communities in the supervisory process and institutionalizing the approach | • Build a new model of collaborative supervision from the ground up that responds to local context and takes advantage of community and health system assets |
| • Enlist health system supervisors as mentors of community counterparts through on-the-job training and learning by doing | ||
| • Encourage and facilitate community reporting on CHW performance that engages health system supervisors in design and implementation | ||
| • Explore the potential of relatively inexpensive mobile communication media, keeping in mind its limitations | ||
| 3. Balanced package of incentives | Identifying the proper mix and sources of financial and non-financial incentives | • Develop a menu of options with explicit statements of advantages and disadvantages of each |
| • Test and modify different approaches to optimizing the impact of the complementary contributions of communities and health systems | ||
| • Maximize the full potential of non-financial incentives originating in both communities and health systems | ||
| 4. Monitoring system | Resistance by health system to support continuous monitoring in the presence of a functioning HMIS | • Present monitoring system as an extension of HMIS, as a means of enhancing its utility by addressing its current limitations |
| • Adopt a long view; build capacity through learning by doing; find incentives for data collection and use; leverage community and health system assets to support and sustain | ||
| Adequate implementation and ensuring data quality | ||
| • Judiciously stage and combine external periodic assessments with continuous data collection, learning, feedback and adjustment | ||
| Overcoming preference for periodic surveys and external assessments/evaluations |
Recommendations for advancing the learning agenda on CHW performance
| Action | Actor | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Comparative analysis | Global health community | The global health community could facilitate decision-making at country level by reviewing and synthesizing analogous partnership efforts from other countries, disciplines, and sectors – both successes and failures. A short list of applicable insights could contribute to more creative, “out-of-the box” thinking and experimentation to guide planning. |
| Retrospective analysis | Countries | Countries that are taking CHW programmes to scale may wish to conduct a retrospective landscape analysis of both successful and unsuccessful partnership experiences that have occurred in different districts and communities in their country. Even though many of these experiences are likely to have occurred in small-scale, NGO-managed projects, there may be important lessons that could be tested at scale. Partnership experiences in sectors other than health, such as agriculture or education, may prove to be a rich source of innovation. |
| Prospective analysis | Countries | Countries also should look for opportunities to develop and institutionalize a prospective, continuous learning and problem-solving process that is tailored to the unique history, dynamics and context of the specific programme. Action research can provide real-time data for continuous adjustment and quality improvement, and it can also provide important information about programme processes that can inform subsequent impact evaluations. |