Literature DB >> 31143930

Does volunteer community health work empower women? Evidence from Ethiopia's Women's Development Army.

Svea Closser1, Harriet Napier1, Kenneth Maes2, Roza Abesha3, Hana Gebremariam3, Grace Backe3, Sarah Fossett3, Yihenew Tesfaye2.   

Abstract

Of the millions of Community Health Workers (CHWs) serving their communities across the world, there are approximately twice as many female CHWs as there are male. Hiring women has in many cases become an ethical expectation, in part because working as a CHW is often seen as empowering the CHW herself to enact positive change in her community. This article draws on interviews, participant observation, document review and a survey carried out in rural Amhara, Ethiopia from 2013 to 2016 to explore discourses and experiences of empowerment among unpaid female CHWs in Ethiopia's Women's Development Army (WDA). This programme was designed to encourage women to leave the house and gain decision-making power vis-à-vis their husbands-and to use this power to achieve specific, state-mandated, domestically centred goals. Some women discovered new opportunities for mobility and self-actualization through this work, and some made positive contributions to the health system. At the same time, by design, women in the WDA had limited ability to exercise political power or gain authority within the structures that employed them, and they were taken away from tending to their individual work demands without compensation. The official rhetoric of the WDA-that women's empowerment can happen by rearranging village-level social relations, without offering poor women opportunities like paid employment, job advancement or the ability to shape government policy-allowed the Ethiopian government and its donors to pursue 'empowerment' without investments in pay for lower-level health workers, or fundamental freedoms introduced into state-society relations.
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ethiopia; empowerment; health systems research; health workers; human resources

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31143930     DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czz025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Policy Plan        ISSN: 0268-1080            Impact factor:   3.344


  4 in total

1.  Redressing the gender imbalance: a qualitative analysis of recruitment and retention in Mozambique's community health workforce.

Authors:  Rosalind Steege; Miriam Taegtmeyer; Sozinho Ndima; Celso Give; Mohsin Sidat; Clara Ferrão; Sally Theobald
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2020-05-24

2.  Impact of a rural drowning reduction programme in Bangladesh on gender equity, norms and behaviour: a mixed-method analysis.

Authors:  Medhavi Gupta; Aminur Rahman; Notan Chandra Dutta; Md Shafkat Hossain; Devaki Nambiar; Samina Parveen; Rebecca Ivers; Jagnoor Jagnoor
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  The "Corona Warriors"? Community health workers in the governance of India's COVID-19 response.

Authors:  Carly Nichols; Falak Jalali; Harry Fischer
Journal:  Polit Geogr       Date:  2022-10-04

4.  The community health worker as service extender, cultural broker and social change agent: a critical interpretive synthesis of roles, intent and accountability.

Authors:  Marta Schaaf; Caitlin Warthin; Lynn Freedman; Stephanie M Topp
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2020-06
  4 in total

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