Tani Kassimu, Stone Allison, Exavery Amon, Njozi Mustafa, Baynes Colin D, Phillips James F, Kanté Almamy Malick
Ifakara Health Institute, P.O. Box 78373, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Sep 1;16(1):461. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1718-6.
Despite expanding international commitment to community health worker (CHW) deployment, little is known about how such workers actually use their time. This paper investigates this issue for paid CHWs named "Community Health Agents," which in Swahili is "Wawezeshaji wa Afya ya Jamii" ("WAJA"), trained for 9 months in primary health care service delivery and deployed to villages as subjects of a randomized trial of their impact on childhood survival in three rural districts of Tanzania.
To capture information about time allocation, 30 WAJA were observed during conventional working hours by research assistants for 5 days each over a period of 4 weeks. Results were presented in term of percentage time allocation for direct client treatment, documentation activities, health education, health promotion non-work-related activities and personal activities.
During routine 8-h workdays, 59.5 % of WAJA time was spent on the provision of health services and other work-related activities. Overall, WAJA spent 27.8 % of their work on traveling from home to home, 33.1 % on health education, 9.9 % of health promotion and only 12.3 % on direct patient care. Other activities related to documentation (7.8 %) and supervision (2.5 %).
Results reflect the pressing obligations of WAJA to engage in activities other than direct work responsibilities during routine work hours. Time spent on work activities is primarily used for health education, promotion, moving between households, and direct patient care. However, greater effort should be directed to strengthening supervisory systems and follow-up of challenges WAJAs facing in order to increase proportion of working hours.
尽管国际社会对社区卫生工作者(CHW)部署的投入不断增加,但对于这些工作者实际如何利用时间却知之甚少。本文针对名为“社区卫生员”(在斯瓦希里语中为“Wawezeshaji wa Afya ya Jamii”,简称“WAJA”)的有偿社区卫生工作者展开此项调查。这些卫生工作者接受了为期9个月的初级卫生保健服务提供培训,并作为对坦桑尼亚三个农村地区儿童生存影响的随机试验对象被部署到各个村庄。
为获取时间分配信息,研究助理在常规工作时间内对30名WAJA进行了观察,为期4周,每人观察5天。结果以直接为客户治疗、记录活动、健康教育、健康促进非工作相关活动和个人活动的时间分配百分比呈现。
在常规的8小时工作日中,WAJA将59.5%的时间用于提供卫生服务和其他与工作相关的活动。总体而言,WAJA在挨家挨户走访上花费了27.8%的工作时间,33.1%用于健康教育,9.9%用于健康促进,而直接为患者护理的时间仅占12.3%。其他与记录(7.8%)和监督(2.5%)相关的活动。
结果反映出WAJA在常规工作时间内除直接工作职责外还需承担其他紧迫义务。用于工作活动的时间主要用于健康教育、促进、在家庭之间奔波以及直接为患者护理。然而,应加大力度加强监督系统,并跟进WAJA面临的挑战,以增加工作时间的占比。