Lewin S A, Dick J, Pond P, Zwarenstein M, Aja G, van Wyk B, Bosch-Capblanch X, Patrick M
Department of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel St, London, UK, WC1E 7HT.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2005 Jan 25(1):CD004015. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004015.pub2.
Lay health workers (LHWs) are widely used to provide care for a broad range of health issues. However, little is known about the effectiveness of LHW interventions.
To assess the effects of LHW interventions in primary and community health care on health care behaviours, patients' health and wellbeing, and patients' satisfaction with care.
We searched the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care and Consumers and Communication specialised registers (to August 2001); the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (to August 2001); MEDLINE (1966- August 2001); EMBASE (1966-August 2001); Science Citations (to August 2001); CINAHL (1966-June 2001); Healthstar (1975-2000); AMED (1966-August 2001); the Leeds Health Education Effectiveness Database and the reference lists of articles.
Randomised controlled trials of any intervention delivered by LHWs (paid or voluntary) in primary or community health care and intended to promote health, manage illness or provide support to patients. A 'lay health worker' was defined as any health worker carrying out functions related to health care delivery; trained in some way in the context of the intervention; and having no formal professional or paraprofessional certificated or degreed tertiary education. There were no restrictions on the types of consumers.
Two reviewers independently extracted data onto a standard form and assessed study quality. Studies that compared broadly similar types of interventions were grouped together. Where feasible, the results of included studies were combined and an estimate of effect obtained.
Forty three studies met the inclusion criteria, involving more than 210,110 consumers. These showed considerable diversity in the targeted health issue and the aims, content and outcomes of interventions. Most were conducted in high income countries (n=35), but nearly half of these focused on low income and minority populations (n=15). Study diversity limited meta-analysis to outcomes for five subgroups (n=15 studies) (LHW interventions to promote the uptake of breast cancer screening, immunisation and breastfeeding promotion [before two weeks and between two weeks and six months post partum] and to improve diagnosis and treatment for selected infectious diseases). Promising benefits in comparison with usual care were shown for LHW interventions to promote immunisation uptake in children and adults (RR=1.30 [95% CI 1.14, 1.48] p=0.0001) and LHW interventions to improve outcomes for selected infectious diseases (RR=0.74 [95% CI 0.58, 0.93) p=0.01). LHWs also appear promising for breastfeeding promotion. They appear to have a small effect in promoting breast cancer screening uptake when compared with usual care. For the remaining subgroups (n=29 studies), the outcomes were too diverse to allow statistical pooling. We can therefore draw no general conclusions on the effectiveness of these subgroups of interventions.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: LHWs show promising benefits in promoting immunisation uptake and improving outcomes for acute respiratory infections and malaria, when compared to usual care. For other health issues, evidence is insufficient to justify recommendations for policy and practice. There is also insufficient evidence to assess which LHW training or intervention strategies are likely to be most effective. Further research is needed in these areas.
非专业卫生工作者(LHWs)被广泛用于提供针对多种健康问题的护理。然而,对于非专业卫生工作者干预措施的有效性了解甚少。
评估非专业卫生工作者在初级和社区卫生保健中的干预措施对医疗行为、患者健康和福祉以及患者对护理满意度的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane有效实践与护理组织及消费者与沟通专业注册库(截至2001年8月);Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(截至2001年8月);MEDLINE(1966 - 2001年8月);EMBASE(1966 - 2001年8月);科学引文索引(截至2001年8月);CINAHL(1966 - 2001年6月);Healthstar(1975 - 2000年);AMED(1966 - 2001年8月);利兹健康教育效果数据库以及文章的参考文献列表。
非专业卫生工作者(有偿或志愿)在初级或社区卫生保健中实施的旨在促进健康、管理疾病或为患者提供支持的任何干预措施的随机对照试验。“非专业卫生工作者”被定义为任何从事与医疗服务相关职能的卫生工作者;在干预背景下接受过某种形式的培训;且没有正式的专业或准专业认证或高等教育学位。对消费者类型没有限制。
两名评审员独立将数据提取到标准表格中并评估研究质量。比较大致相似类型干预措施的研究被归为一组。在可行的情况下,合并纳入研究的结果并获得效应估计值。
43项研究符合纳入标准,涉及超过210,110名消费者。这些研究表明,在目标健康问题以及干预措施的目标、内容和结果方面存在很大差异。大多数研究在高收入国家进行(n = 35),但其中近一半关注低收入和少数族裔人群(n = 15)。研究的多样性使得荟萃分析仅限于五个亚组的结果(n = 15项研究)(非专业卫生工作者促进乳腺癌筛查、免疫接种和母乳喂养促进[产后两周内以及产后两周至六个月]以及改善特定传染病诊断和治疗的干预措施)。与常规护理相比,非专业卫生工作者促进儿童和成人免疫接种的干预措施显示出有希望的益处(RR = 1.30 [95% CI 1.14, 1.48] p = 0.0001),以及非专业卫生工作者改善特定传染病结局的干预措施(RR = 0.74 [95% CI 0.58, 0.93] p = 0.01)。非专业卫生工作者在促进母乳喂养方面似乎也有前景。与常规护理相比,他们在促进乳腺癌筛查接受度方面似乎有较小的效果。对于其余亚组(n = 29项研究),结果过于多样,无法进行统计合并。因此,我们无法就这些亚组干预措施的有效性得出一般性结论。
与常规护理相比,非专业卫生工作者在促进免疫接种以及改善急性呼吸道感染和疟疾结局方面显示出有希望的益处。对于其他健康问题,证据不足以支持政策和实践建议。也没有足够的证据来评估哪种非专业卫生工作者培训或干预策略可能最有效。这些领域需要进一步研究。