| Literature DB >> 28685046 |
Robert E Black1,2, Carl E Taylor1,3, Shobha Arole4,2,5, Abhay Bang6,2,5, Zulfiqar A Bhutta7,8,2,5, A Mushtaque R Chowdhury9,2,5, Betty R Kirkwood10,2,5, Nazo Kureshy11,2,5, Claudio F Lanata12,2,5, James F Phillips13,2,5, Mary Taylor14,2,5, Cesar G Victora15,2,5, Zonghan Zhu16,2,5, Henry B Perry1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The contributions that community-based primary health care (CBPHC) and engaging with communities as valued partners can make to the improvement of maternal, neonatal and child health (MNCH) is not widely appreciated. This unfortunate reality is one of the reasons why so few priority countries failed to achieve the health-related Millennium Development Goals by 2015. This article provides a summary of a series of articles about the effectiveness of CBPHC in improving MNCH and offers recommendations from an Expert Panel for strengthening CBPHC that were formulated in 2008 and have been updated on the basis of more recent evidence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28685046 PMCID: PMC5475312 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.07.010908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Effective interventions for maternal, newborn and child health that can be provided by community health workers in the community or at a health post [21–23]
| Point in continuum of care | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preparation for safe birth and newborn care; emergency planning | Management of labor and delivery and referral of complications | Promotion of breastfeeding | Neonatal resuscitation | Promote breastfeeding and complementary feeding |
| Micronutrient supplementation* | Breastfeeding | Provide vitamin A, zinc, and food supplementation | ||
| Nutrition education | Thermal care for preterm newborns | Immunizations | ||
| Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria during pregnancy) | Promote care–seeking | Co–trimoxazole for HIV–positive children | ||
| Food supplementation | Assess for danger signs and refer | Education on safe disposal of children’s stools and handwashing | ||
| Promotion of HIV testing | Oral antibiotics for pneumonia | Distribute and promote use of ITNs† or IRS‡, or both | ||
| Assess for danger signs and refer | ||||
| Detect and refer children with severe acute malnutrition | ||||
| Detect and treat serious infections without danger signs (iCCM§), refer if danger signs present | ||||
*Because of some evidence of risk and gaps in the evidence, the WHO does not at this time recommend multiple micronutrient supplementation for pregnant women to improve maternal and perinatal outcomes [24].
†Insecticide–treated bednet.
‡Indoor residual spraying.
§Integrated community case management (the components include treatments for diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria).
Figure 1Maternal, perinatal, neonatal and child deaths that can be averted by health–care packages through three service platforms [22]. The numbers above the columns were not in the original figure. The services assumed to be provided in each platform are as follows. all interventions that can be delivered by a community–based health worker with appropriate training and support or by outreach services, such as child health days, immunizations, vitamin A, and other interventions. a facility with a doctor or a nurse midwife (or both), nurses and support staff, as well as both diagnostic and treatment capabilities. The PHC provides facility–based contraceptive services, including long–acting reversible contraceptives (implants, intrauterine devices); surgical sterilization (vasectomy, tubal ligation); care during pregnancy and delivery for uncomplicated pregnancies; provision of medical care for adults and children, such as injectable antibiotics, that cannot be done in the community; and training and supervision of community–based workers. consisting of both first–level and referral hospitals, includes more advanced services for management of labor and delivery in high–risk women or those with complications, including operative delivery, full supportive care for preterm newborns, and care of children with severe infection or severe acute malnutrition with infection [22].
Expert Panel recommendations for promoting community engagement/empowerment for improved maternal, neonatal and child health
| Main recommendations | Details |
|---|---|
| Empower communities and women in these communities to be more actively engaged in improving the health of mothers, newborns and children | Establish a foundation of values that supports partnerships with communities and processes to build community capacity through giving communities a voice in supervising or controlling certain aspects of local government health services, and through building the agency of women (such as the promotion of women’s empowerment, support of micro–credit programs and development of conditional cash transfer programs). |
| Support the development of community–based organizations focused on local health needs and on the planning, implementation, and evaluation of local health programs. | |
| Build stronger partnerships between the community and the health system | Create a health system culture that is respectful of and collaborative with community members. |
| Create bi–directional communication flows. | |
| Create bi–directional linkages between the district health system and communities that can help everyone be accountable for health system performance. | |
| Involve communities in monitoring, evaluation, and use of health–related information | Create systems for the community’s generation and use of health data (including registration of births and deaths and identification of those in greatest need of services, as part of a continuing process to promote equity in all stages of health care). |
| Develop participatory approaches to the monitoring and evaluation of CBPHC programs, including assessments of mortality impact. |
Expert Panel recommendations for strengthening the delivery system for improved maternal, neonatal and child health
| Main recommendations | Details |
|---|---|
| Extend the delivery system to every community and household | Involve community members in the delivery of services. |
| Train and support community–level workers who (1) receive sufficient incentives or salary to support their long–term involvement, (2) receive appropriate supportive and technical supervision from staff based at the nearest health facility, and (3) are accountable to their local community. | |
| Provide appropriate training and supervision of community–level workers (who preferably are selected from and by the communities where they will work) to perform health tasks that respond to local health needs and that address the epidemiological priorities of mothers and their children. | |
| Train and support neighborhood volunteers for peer–to–peer health promotion. | |
| Develop an appropriate balance of community–level workers for the required service intensity (while at the same time ensuring a suitable workload for an appropriate number of tasks and ensuring enough time required for each task, given the distance to homes and the level of remuneration/ incentives). | |
| Coordinate the activities of the formal health sector with the informal health sector (drug sellers and individual practitioners, including traditional healers). | |
| Promote delivery of interventions to those at greatest risk | Provide “safety nets” that reduce barriers to accessing and providing services (eg, “CBPHC–friendly” insurance systems to remunerate providers and incentive schemes to promote utilization of health services). |
| Create equitable service delivery strategies that identify and reach those in greatest need | |
| Build a stronger, more efficient, and more effective health delivery system | Provide adequate, sustainable and flexible global, national and local financing that responds to the needs of community–based programs in relation to the amount being spent for facility–based care. |
| Foster investments at the community and local level for support of community–based programs and for strengthening primary health care at peripheral health facilities. | |
| Provide adequate supplies for service delivery. | |
| Integrate services at the community level (based on delivery system capacity and local need). | |
| Monitor expenditures for CBPHC against those for primary health centers and hospitals and ensure that these levels are appropriate given the importance of CBPHC for averting deaths. |