Ehiri John E, Gunn Jayleen K L, Center Katherine E, Li Ying, Rouhani Mae, Ezeanolue Echezona E
Division of Health Promotion Sciences/Global Health Institute, Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA;
Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Glob Health Action. 2014 Oct 1;7:23902. doi: 10.3402/gha.v7.23902. eCollection 2014.
Training of lay refugees/internally displaced persons (IDPs) and deploying them to provide basic health services to other women, children, and families in camps is perceived to be associated with public health benefits. However, there is limited evidence to support this hypothesis.
To assess the effects of interventions to train and deploy lay refugees and/or IDPs for the provision of basic health service to other women, children, and families in camps.
PubMed, Science and Social Science Citation Indices, PsycINFO, EMBASE, POPLINE, CINAHL, and reference lists of relevant articles were searched (from inception to June 30, 2014) with the aim of identifying studies that reported the effects of interventions that trained and deployed lay refugees and/or IDPs for the provision of basic health service to other women, children, and families in camps. Two investigators independently reviewed all titles and abstracts to identify potentially relevant articles. Discrepancies were resolved by repeated review, discussion, and consensus. Study quality assessment was undertaken using standard protocols.
Ten studies (five cross-sectional, four pre-post, and one post-test only) conducted in Africa (Guinea and Tanzania), Central America (Belize), and Asia (Myanmar) were included. The studies demonstrated some positive impact on population health associated with training and deployment of trained lay refugees/IDPs as health workers in camps. Reported effects included increased service coverage, increased knowledge about disease symptoms and prevention, increased adoption of improved treatment seeking and protective behaviors, increased uptake of services, and improved access to reproductive health information. One study, which assessed the effect of peer refugee health education on sexual and reproductive health, did not demonstrate a marked reduction in unintended pregnancies among refugee/IDP women.
Although available evidence suggests a positive impact of training and deployment of lay refugees/IDPs as health workers in camps, existing body of evidence is weak, and calls for a re-examination of current practices. Interventions that promote training and deployment of lay refugees/IDPs as health workers in camps should include strong evaluation components in order to facilitate assessment of effects on population health.
培训非专业难民/境内流离失所者(IDP)并将其部署到营地中为其他妇女、儿童和家庭提供基本卫生服务,被认为具有公共卫生益处。然而,支持这一假设的证据有限。
评估培训和部署非专业难民及/或境内流离失所者以向营地中的其他妇女、儿童和家庭提供基本卫生服务的干预措施的效果。
检索了PubMed、科学与社会科学引文索引、PsycINFO、EMBASE、POPLINE、CINAHL以及相关文章的参考文献列表(从数据库建库至2014年6月30日),目的是识别报告了培训和部署非专业难民及/或境内流离失所者以向营地中的其他妇女、儿童和家庭提供基本卫生服务的干预措施效果的研究。两名研究人员独立审查所有标题和摘要,以识别潜在相关文章。通过反复审查、讨论和达成共识来解决分歧。使用标准方案进行研究质量评估。
纳入了在非洲(几内亚和坦桑尼亚)、中美洲(伯利兹)和亚洲(缅甸)开展的10项研究(5项横断面研究、4项前后对照研究和1项仅进行了后测的研究)。这些研究表明,培训和部署经过培训的非专业难民/境内流离失所者作为营地卫生工作者对人群健康有一些积极影响。报告的效果包括服务覆盖范围增加、对疾病症状和预防的知识增加、采用改善的求医行为和保护行为增加、服务利用率增加以及获得生殖健康信息的机会改善。一项评估同伴难民健康教育对性健康和生殖健康影响的研究未显示难民/境内流离失所者妇女意外怀孕显著减少。
尽管现有证据表明培训和部署非专业难民/境内流离失所者作为营地卫生工作者有积极影响,但现有证据不足,需要重新审视当前做法。促进培训和部署非专业难民/境内流离失所者作为营地卫生工作者的干预措施应包括强有力的评估部分,以便于评估对人群健康的影响。