| Literature DB >> 30703152 |
Kathrin Schmitz1, Tariro Jayson Basera2, Bonaventure Egbujie3, Preethi Mistri2, Nireshni Naidoo2, Witness Mapanga4, Jane Goudge4, Majorie Mbule1, Fiona Burtt1, Esca Scheepers1, Jude Igumbor2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increased demand for healthcare services in countries experiencing high HIV disease burden and often coupled with a shortage of health workers, has necessitated task shifting from professional health workers to Lay Health Workers (LHWs) in order to improve healthcare delivery. Maternal and Child Health (MCH) services particularly benefit from task-shifting to LHWs or similar cadres. However, evidence on the roles and usefulness of LHWs in MCH service delivery in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is not fully known.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30703152 PMCID: PMC6355001 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0211439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram for the selection of studies for inclusion in the scoping review.
Primary papers describing LHW interventions targeted at WLH and their exposed infants.
| Authors, year & setting | Research Design | Intervention Type | Intervention implementation | Challenges to implementation | Outcome indicators | Impact of the intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Richter et al, 2014 (22): | Cluster randomised control trial | Masihambisane 8 session intervention– 4 antenatal & 4 postnatal sessions for WLH attending public health clinics led by peer mentors | Antenatal to 1.5 months post-birth [intervention over 6 months] | Not all eligible women were recruited in the intervention; Some WLH did not accept the HIV test because of fear of stigma; WLH were not keen to attend ANC intervention sessions | HIV transmission-related behaviours; Infant health status; Maternal healthcare utilisation; Depression; Parenting tasks | Masihambisane had a significant effect on 3 of 16 post birth outcomes–compliance with maternal and infant ART, PMTCT tasks until 1.5 months post-delivery, more likely to request partner testing, have infants with height-for-age z-scores ≥ -2, less likely to report depressed mood and less likely to adhere to ART during pregnancy |
| Rotheram-Borus et al, 2014 (23): South Africa | Cluster randomised control trial | Peer mentors’ series of eight group meetings using cognitive-behavioural skills, health facilities based | From first ANC visit to 12 months post-delivery | WLH who worked or lived in the rural areas found it difficult to attend clinical services. | HIV transmission-related behaviours; Infant health status and bonding; Healthcare and health monitoring; Depression; Social support | Intervention improved 4 of 19 outcomes–one feeding method, exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months, better weight for age, larger decrease in depressed mood, |
| Teasdale & Besser, 2008 (17): | Cross-sectional study | Mentor mothers (HIV-positives mother who have completed PMTCT) provide comprehensive peer education and psychosocial support to pregnant women and new mothers, aimed at increasing the uptake of PMTCT services to reduce HIV MTCT, empower women and destigmatise HIV/AIDS. | Education and counselling on HIV, PMTCT, infant feeding, disclosure, safe sex, family planning, stigma. Delivered during | Mentor mothers experienced suspicion and lack of trust by their clients. | PMTCT knowledge; | Improved ART prophylaxis for mother and infant (taken NVP and given their infants NVP for PMTCT). |
| Tomlinson et al2015(50): South Africa | Cross-sectional cohort | Mentor Mothers home visits | Mentor Mothers visited all homes in their neighbourhoods frequently for | Some areas of the community were in accessible because reported crimes in those areas | Child growth (stunting, wasting and underweight in children) | Children living in areas where the Mentor Mothers were working were significantly less likely to be underweight and severely underweight than children living in control areas. |
| Phiri et al., 2017 (14): | Mixed method approach | Mentor mothers provided one-on-one support at each clinic visit, led weekly clinic-based support groups | Contact was by phone call, text message, or home visit based on the woman’s preference. Contacted women within 1 week of a missed appointment. | Mentor and expert mothers were not trained to document outcomes on clinical forms | ART uptake | 90% ART uptake compared to 86% in facility-based models. |
| ENHAT-CS, 2014 (41): | Retrospective cohort | Mother mentors (HIV positive) followed mother-infant pairs at home and health facilities | Education and counselling individually and in Mother Support Groups on HIV, healthy behaviours, HCT for infants and partners, treatment adherence, linkage to healthcare, income generating activities, social and legal support, and tracking mothers that are lost to follow up | *Information not available | ARVs uptake; Linkage to care; HEI testing; Lost to follow-up among HEIs | Improved initiation of ART in pregnant mothers; EID through increased number of HEI tested; lower loss to follow up rates for HEIs |
| Shroufi et al, 2013 (16): | Retrospective cohort | Mother-to-Mother mentor mother programmes for pregnant WHL | Psychosocial support, education and advice on promotion and retention in care (adherence support, counselling) | Some participants preferred receiving HIV information from formally qualified staff than mentor mothers; | PMTCT knowledge; Disclosure; Psychosocial well-being; HEI testing; PMTCT retention | Improved knowledge on PMTCT; empowered women and increased disclosure of HIV status; increased testing of HEI (EID); improved psychosocial well-being through strengthening social relationships of WLH interpersonally; improved retention in PMTCT |
| Futterman et al, 2010 (6): | Pilot randomised control trial | Mentor mothers | Support through pregnancy and post-birth | The programme experienced attrition of participants with time; | Adherence to PMTCT | Improved knowledge of HIV and self-care–understanding the meaning and importance of viral load and CD4 test results; Significantly greater improvement in mental health; Improved social support systems; Ability to cope with HIV stigma (improved emotional states, depression scores and psychosocial coping skills); better attendance at follow-up medical visits |
| Besser et al, 2010 (51): | Pilot Active Client Follow-up simple intervention | Mothers-to-Mothers PMTCT peer mentors–active client follow-up; clinic and home based | Education at clinics on infant testing; reminder phone calls and home visits to promote EID and health of HEIs | Some of the provided phone numbers were not working; Some mothers provided wrong home addresses | EID uptake | Improved HEI testing |
| Sam-Agudu et al., 2017 (39): Nigeria | Prospective Paired Cohort Study | MMs link with new PMTCT clients at ANC clinics. | MMs make a first home visit within 5 days of linking with the client and visit every 2 weeks thereafter. After delivery of the infant, MMs visit their mothers within 7 days of facility delivery, or within 3 days of non-facility delivery and every 2 weeks thereafter until the infant is 12 months old. They additionally call or visit clients in the event of missed clinic appointments. | Quality of care issues at implementing PHCs. | Proportion of exposed HIV infants receiving early HIV testing by age 2 months | Exposure to structured MM support was associated with higher odds of retention than routine PS. |
| Sam-Agudu et al, 2017 (34): Nigeria | Prospective paired cohort study | Mentor Mothers counsel less experienced peer outcomes for optimal PMTCT outcomes | MMs make a first home visit within 5 days of linking with the client and visit every 2 weeks thereafter. After delivery of the infant, MMs visit their mothers within 7 days of facility delivery, or within 3 days of non-facility delivery and every 2 weeks thereafter until the infant is 12 months old. They additionally call or visit clients in the event of missed clinic appointments. | Implementation fidelity | Facility delivery rates | Exposure to structured MM support did not improve facility delivery |
| Sam-Agudu et al, 2017: Nigeria | Prospective paired cohort study | MMs link with new PMTCT clients at ANC clinics. | MMs make a first home visit within 5 days of linking with the client and visit every 2 weeks thereafter. After delivery of the infant, MMs visit their mothers within 7 days of facility delivery, or within 3 days of non-facility delivery and every 2 weeks thereafter until the infant is 12 months old. They additionally call or visit clients in the event of missed clinic appointments. | Confidentiality and fear of disclosure | Retention (clinic attendance during the first 6 month postpartum; viral suppression (viral load<20 copies/mL) | Exposure to structured MM support improved postpartum PMTCT retention and viral suppression rates |
| Tomlinson et al, 2017 (42): South Africa | Cluster RCT | MMs conduct home visits. They provide counselling and education on PMTCT tasks, reduced alcohol use/abuse and child growth and nutrition | MMs visit clients in their homes during pregnancy and the first 6 postpartum months for a minimum 8 times | - | Child cognitive and motor scale scores | Improved cognitive development and child growth associated with exposure to the Philani Intervention |
| Hosseinipour et al, 2017 (33): Malawi | Cluster RCT | MMs provide clinic-based support and community-based expert mothers provide community-based support including education and psychosocial support to all women and male partners | One-on-one support at clinics and in the community; lead weekly clinic-based support groups; lead monthly community-based support groups; Contact women within one week of a missed appointment | Failure to collect all specimens among retained women at the appropriate time points and challenges with maintaining appropriate storage conditions for dry blood spot. | Viral load suppression; Proportion of women retained at 2 years after initiating Option B+ | HIV virological suppression was below the 90% desirable target |
| Lewycka et al, 201 (25): | Factorial cluster-randomised control trial | MaiMwana Volunteer peer counsellors, women’s groups through community mobilisation | Peer counsellors–made home visits at five time points during pregnancy and after birth to support infant feeding and care, PMTCT, family planning, care seeking | Some delays in implementation since these were volunteers; relying on self-reported statistics on breastfeeding | Maternal, perinatal, neonatal and infant mortality rate; | Improved exclusive breastfeeding; reduction in infant and maternal mortality rate; |
| Sarnquist et al, 2014 (24): | Quasi-experimental, prospective intervention trial | PURSE–Peers Undertaking Reproductive and Sexual Health Education | Skills on sexual negotiation, empowerment, HIV information, PMTCT, family planning and communication skills | *Information not available | Women’s control over condom use, uptake of LARC, sexual negotiation power and ability to advocate for family planning | Improved HIV disclosure; family planning; sexual knowledge and negotiation. |
| Namukwaya et al, 2015 (38): Uganda | Cohort study | Peers lay persons and VHT members support women, their partners and infants through provision of health education, counselling, home visits and phone call reminders. | Pregnant women are followed through delivery and mother-infant pairs for the first 6-week postnatal visit and up to 14 weeks for EID | Some mothers declined to disclose their HIV status to the community lay persons and hence were not visited by the lay persons, but by peers instead. | Six-week attendance; EID | The peer support intervention increased six-week postnatal follow-up of HIV infected women and EID of HIV exposed infants |
| Kimbrough & Baker, 2014 (19): Kenya | Prospective cohort | CHWs provided health education for pregnant women, encouraged them to go to ANC visits, and urged them to deliver their babies at the health centre instead of at home or with a TBA. | HIV-positive mothers and other high-risk pregnant women were especially targeted and encouraged to deliver at the health centre | Average attrition rate of about one CHW per month. It is possible that relying on volunteers is only productive for a short time, regardless of how meaningful the work is. | Use of maternal health services (Facility based delivery | The proportion of health centre deliveries of HIV-positive women significantly increased (p = 0.04) from an average of 6.5 to 14 FBDs (115% increase). |
| Tomlinson et al, 2014 (21): | Cluster-randomised effectiveness trial | Good Start Community health worker intervention for maternal and newborn care and PMTCT | Antenatal and postnatal structured home visits (at least 7 visits) providing education and counselling on ANC, integrated management of childhood illnesses guided content, PMTCT, infant feeding and motivational interviewing for breastfeeding counselling. | Intervention was implemented at a time when national policy did not support EBF for HIV positive women. | Levels of HIV-free survival; | The intervention almost doubled exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) at 12 weeks and showed a 6 relative increase in EBF with each additional CHW visit (With intervention having a greater effect among HIV negative women (RR 2.16 (95% CI 1.71–2.73); Improvements in knowledge of newborn danger signs, clinic visits within the first week of life, testing for HIV-exposed infants at 6 weeks and availability of cotrimoxazole in the house at 12 weeks; Increased infant weight and length for age z-scores |
| Nsibande et al, 2013 (1): | Community randomized trial | Good Start Saving Newborn Lives–Community health workers delivered an integrated home visit package antenatal and post-delivery | Antenatal and postnatal structured home visits (at least 7 visits) providing education and counselling on ANC, integrated management of childhood illnesses guided content, PMTCT, infant feeding; education on identifying danger signs and referrals of ill babies to health facilities. | Selection bias due to loss to follow up; recall bias due to interviews occurring 2 weeks to 18 months after the events transpired | Uptake of PMTCT and appropriate newborn care practices | High compliance with CHW referrals to health facility care for ill infants–improved linkage to care; |
| Le Roux et al, 2013 (20): | Cluster randomised control trial | Phliani Intervention Programme (PIP) | CHWs conducted home visits–antenatal (1–27 visits, average 6) & postnatal (1–12 visits, average 5). The antenatal messages concerned: 1) good maternal nutrition and preparing for breastfeeding; 2) regular antenatal clinic attendance and danger signs; 3) HIV testing, PMTCT tasks and partner prevention strategies; and 4) stopping alcohol use. | The intensity of PIP programme sometimes demands CHWs to work more than their stipulated weekly hours. | Maternal nutrition & infant feeding; antenatal clinic attendance; HCT, PMTCT adherence; | The PIP programme had significant effect on 6 out of 28 outcomes: |
| Kim et al, 2012 (18): | Pilot intervention study | Tingathe-PMTCT programme Community health workers health facility and community-based tasks, followed pregnant WLH at health facilities and at home–from diagnosis at ANC to post-delivery | Ensuring all PMTCT services received, education on HIV, PMTCT care, newborn care and EID, infant feeding and nutrition, ART, managing stigma. | Some mothers refused to be followed up; Highly mobile population -some mothers moved from one area to another and were lost to follow-up | Utilisation of PMTCT, EID uptake, ART initiation | Improved initiation of pregnant mothers on ART, improved uptake of EID, early initiation of infected infants on ART |
| Ferrand et al, 2017 (35): Zimbabwe | RCT | CHWs had one to one session with children’s primary caregivers | Sessions were conducted for 18 months after enrolment at crucial points in a participant’s progression through HIV diagnosis, treatment initiation, and long-term care, at a location of the caregiver’s choice | Adequate ART supplies to cover 3 months were not always available | Proportion of participants who died or had a viral load of 400 copies per mL or higher at 12 months after ART initiation; Proportion who missed two or more scheduled clinic visits by 18 months post-enrolment | The community-based support program reduced risk of virological failure in HIV infected children. |
| Nance et al, 2017 (40): Tanzania | Cluster RCT | CHWs provided adherence counselling to pregnant and postpartum WLH and they also traced clients who defaulted | CHWs met WLH 90 days postpartum at least 1–4 times a month | Poor quality of program implementation in some facilities; Lack of CHW motivation in some sites | Retention in care between 60 and 120 days postpartum; ART initiation, timing of ART initiation and ART adherence 90 days postpartum | The CHW intervention did not have strong effects on PMTCT indicators with no significant differences in retention in care, ART initiation, or timing of ART initiation |
| Vogt et al, 2015 [ | Retrospective cohort study | CHWs conducted home visits to trace defaulting patients upon request of the nurse in charge | CHWs were notified of a defaulting client residing in their area | - | Vertical HIV transmission rates 6 weeks post-partum; Retention rates during the perinatal PMTCT period; ART initiation | CHW default tracing did not reduce MTCT of HIV; Retention improved moderately during the post-natal period |
| Jama & Tshotsho, 2013 [ | Qualitative study with focus group interviews using a semi-structured questionnaire | Task shifting to patient advocates already known in the community to follow up on pregnant WLH non-compliant with care | Addresses of clients were checked in maternity registers and Patient advocates visit them | Some client addresses are wrong. | Tracking of non-compliant pregnant WLH to improve linkage to care | Compliance of pregnant WLH was slightly increased although there were many challenges. |
| Grimwood et al., 2012 (26): South Africa | Cohort study | Patient advocates provide adherence and psychosocial support for children’s caregivers; supervised the taking of medication and advised on problems that may have risen | From treatment initiation. Following the psychosocial screening visit, home visits occurred weekly for a month | Missing viral load test results | Mortality after ART initiation, patient retention, virological suppression and CD4 percentage changes on ART | Children with Pas had reduced probabilities of attrition and mortality |
| Other intervention | ||||||
| Patel et al, 2012 (2): | Retrospective analysis of routine data | Establishment of community run early childhood development play centres for orphaned and vulnerable children (OVC) under 5 years affected by HIV, in close proximity to health centres–as an extension of PMTCT activities | Community mobilisers, village health workers, community-based carers, peer educators identified the OVC, facilitated their registration at centres, provided psychosocial support, protection, referral and linkage to health services for HIV testing and treatment. | Lack of adequate resources at some of the community-run ECD | HIV testing; Initiation on ART; Community sensitisation | Improved HIV testing among children; Improved access to care and initiation on ART; Child minding capacity of carers especially on HIV care and support; Sensitisation at community level of the needs of and support for children affected by HIV |
| Peltzer et al, 2017 (31): South Africa | Cluster RCT | Trained LHWs facilitated counselling sessions | 3 prenatal weekly 2h group sessions followed by one individual counselling session and 2 monthly individual counselling session (one prenatal, 2 postpartum) | Limited session attendance and low fidelity at several sites; Participants were not compensated for session attendance and most women found economic for transportation to the CHC for pre-and post-natal care challenging | HIV infant status, ART adherence, HIV and PMTCT knowledge | Intervention did not have any impact on HIV infant status, ART adherence, HIV and PMTCT knowledge |
| Mwapasa et al, 2017 (37): Malawi | Cluster RCT | Community based volunteers sent clients SMS reminders | CBVs traced mothers who miss scheduled health facility visits | Suboptimal exposure of women to the MIP service delivery model; Inadequate implementation of the study interventions by health workers; challenges in the implementation of the SMS-based tracing | Maternal and infant retention rate | SMS service delivery models were ineffective in improving maternal and infant retention |