| Literature DB >> 28838190 |
Nicole Deutsch1, Prem Singh1, Vivek Singh1,2, Rod Curtis3, Anisur Rahman Siddique1.
Abstract
The Social Mobilization Network (SMNet) has been lauded as one of the most successsful community engagement strategies in public health for its role in polio elimination in India. The UNICEF-managed SMNet was created as a strategy to eradicate polio by engaging >7000 frontline social mobilizers to advocate for vaccination in some of the most underserved, marginalized, and at-risk communities in India. This network focused initially on generating demand for polio vaccination but later expanded its messaging to promote routine immunization and other health and sanitation interventions related to maternal and children's health. As an impact of the network's interventions, in collaboration with other eradication efforts, these high-risk pockets witnessed an increase in full routine immunization coverage. The experience of the SMNet offers lessons for health-system strengthening for social mobilization and promoting positive health behaviors for other priority health programs like the Universal Immunization Program.Entities:
Keywords: Polio Legacy; Social Mobilization Network (SMNet); System Strengthening; Universal Immunization Program (UIP)
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28838190 PMCID: PMC5854010 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jix068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Figure 1.Universal Immunization Program strengthening strategies: lesson learned from polio eradication.
Role of Various Frontline Health Workers
| Health personnel | ASHA | ANM | AWW |
|---|---|---|---|
| About | Consists of community health workers instituted by the government of India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare as part of the National Rural Health Mission. | Consists of village-level female health workers in India who serve as the first contact between the community and the health services. Regarded as grass-roots workers in the health organization pyramid. |
|
| Type of compensation | Local volunteers receive outcome-based remuneration and financial compensation | Permanent or contractual salaried health manpower | Salaried manpower under Department of Women and Child Development |
| Level of education | Minimum eighth standard pass | Auxiliary nurse midwife nursing course | 10 + 2 |
| Training status | 7 training modules under National Health Mission. ANM acts as a resource for the training of ASHAs. | Nursing course and various health programs trainings | Job training course and refresher trainings through Anganwadi training center |
| Major job profile | Work as first port of call for health and act as a link between community and health department. Provide health information to community, counsel and mobilize community for health services. Act as a depot holder for key drugs and logistics. | Work at health subcentres. Expected to be multipurpose health workers. Work includes maternal and child health along with family planning services, health and nutrition education, efforts for maintaining environmental sanitation, immunization, control of communicable diseases, treatment of minor injuries, and first aid in emergencies and disasters. | Work includes conducting regular quick surveys of all families, organizing preschool activities, providing health and nutrition education to families, especially pregnant women on how to breastfeed, motivating families to adopt family planning, educating parents about child growth and development, providing supplementary nutrition to children aged <6 years and pregnant women, educating teenage girls and parents by organizing social awareness programs, etc. |
| Population served | One worker for 1000 population | One worker for 5000 population in plains and 3000 population in hilly and tribal areas | One worker for 1000 population |
Abbreviations: ANM, Auxiliary Nurse Midwives; AHSA, Accredited Social Health Activists; AWW, Anganwadi Workers.
Figure 2.Trend tonality of polio news stories from Western Uttar Pradesh from January 2007 to September 2012. Source: UNICEF [18].
Figure 3.Full immunization coverage in SMNet areas. Source: UNICEF [18, 20].
Figure 4.Reasons for partial immunization and no immunization of children in India, January–June 2016. Number of children aged 12–23 months monitored = 217 073. Abbreviation: AEFI, adverse event following immunization. Source: Concurrent routine immunization monitoring data. Reprinted from Feachem [24].