| Literature DB >> 33042947 |
Sarah Larkins1, Karen Carlisle1, Humpress Harrington1,2, David MacLaren1,2, Etivina Lovo1,3, Relmah Harrington1,2, Lucsendar Fernandes Alves4,5, Eric Rafai6, Mere Delai6, Maxine Whittaker1.
Abstract
Health systems in the Asia-Pacific region are poorly prepared for pandemic threats, particularly in rural/provincial areas. Yet future emerging infectious diseases are highly likely to emerge in these rural/provincial areas, due to high levels of contact between animals and humans (domestically and through agricultural activities), over-stretched and under-resourced health systems, notably within the health workforce, and a diverse array of socio-cultural determinants of health. In order to optimally implement health security measures at the frontline of health services where the people are served, it is vital to build capacity at the local district and facility level to adapt national and global guidelines to local contexts, including health systems, and community and socio-cultural realities. During 2017/18 James Cook University (JCU) facilitated an implementation research training program (funded by Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade) for rural/provincial and regional health and biosecurity workers and managers from Fiji, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea (PNG), Solomon Islands and Timor-Leste. This training was designed so frontline health workers could learn research in their workplace, with no funding other than workplace resources, on topics relevant to health security in their local setting. The program, based upon the WHO-TDR Structured Operational Research and Training IniTiative (SORT-IT) consists of three blocks of teaching and a small, workplace-based research project. Over 50 projects by health workers including surveillance staff, laboratory managers, disease control officers, and border security staff included: analysis and mapping of surveillance data, infection control, IHR readiness, prevention/response and outbreak investigation. Policy briefs written by participants have informed local, provincial and national health managers, policy makers and development partners and provided on-the-ground recommendations for improved practice and training. These policy briefs reflected the socio-cultural, health system and disease-specific realities of each context. The information in the policy briefs can be used collectively to assess and strengthen health workforce capacity in rural/provincial areas. The capacity to use robust but simple research tools for formative and evaluative purposes provides sustainable capacity in the health system, particularly the rural health workforce. This capacity improves responses to infectious diseases threats and builds resilience into fragile health systems.Entities:
Keywords: Asia Pacific; capacity strengthening; communicable disease; disease outbreak; implementation research; surveillance and response; training
Year: 2020 PMID: 33042947 PMCID: PMC7524875 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Program logic guiding capacity-strengthening activities of the Partners in Tropical Health project.
Figure 2Structure and milestones of the modified SORT-iT program used in the Indo-Pacific for the Partners in Tropical Health project.
Demographic characteristics of completed Research Fellows.
| Fiji | 17 (32.1%) | |
| Solomon Islands | 19 (36.4%) | |
| Papua New Guinea | 5 (9.4%) | |
| Eastern Indonesia | 11 (20.8%) | |
| Timor-Leste | 1 (1.9%) | |
| Sex | Female | 34 (64.2%) |
| Male | 19 (35.8%) | |
| Highest educational qualification | Doctoral degree | 1 (1.9%) |
| Master's degree | 13 (24.5%) | |
| Bachelor degree | 28 (52.8%) | |
| Diploma | 11 (20.8%) | |
| Occupational group | Surveillance and response worker (field/rural) | 15 (28.3%) |
| Nurse | 13 (24.5%) | |
| Doctor | 2 (3.8%) | |
| Biosecurity worker | 3 (5.7%) | |
| Surveillance and response worker (provincial) | 9 (17.0%) | |
| Lecturer/teacher | 6 (11.3%) | |
| Laboratory Scientist | 4 (7.5%) | |
Project areas, health system building blocks, factors affecting health system capacity, and recommendations from Research Fellows.
| Health information systems (19 projects) | • Use of data for prediction, response, evaluation | • Under-reporting and double counting | • Strengthen surveillance and response systems, especially capacity of health workers to document and respond |
| Workforce (11 projects) | • Clinical practices | • Inadequate knowledge and supervision | • Invest in adequate health staff to respond to outbreaks (incl. surge) |
| Community (8 projects) | • Health seeking behavior | • Limited health seeking behavior (related to knowledge and stigma) | • Target community education and health promotion to reduce stigma |
| Medical products and infrastructure (6 projects) | • Antimicrobial resistance | • Laboratory and health facilities ill–equipped with unreliable supplies | • Review inventory and restocking systems |
| Service delivery (6 projects) | • Home based care | • Accessibility, affordability and acceptability issues | • Training and recognition of volunteers as important HRH |
| Governance (2 projects) | • Intersectoral collaboration (One Health) | • Missing defined roles responsibilities, protocols, policies | • Standard operating procedures and policies for preparedness and response |
| Financing (1 project) | • Development assistance | • Important role of development assistance financing | • Stable, ongoing programs of development assistance |
CD, Communicable Diseases; TB-DOTS, Tuberculosis - Directly Observed Treatment- Short-course; PD, Professional Development; QI, Quality Improvement; HRH, Human Resources for Health.
Figure 3Interconnections for a stronger rural health workforce and better health security.