Luckow Peter W, Kenny Avi, White Emily, Ballard Madeleine, Dorr Lorenzo, Erlandson Kirby, Grant Benjamin, Johnson Alice, Lorenzen Breanna, Mukherjee Subarna, Ly E John, McDaniel Abigail, Nowine Netus, Sathananthan Vidiya, Sechler Gerald A, Kraemer John D, Siedner Mark J, Panjabi Rajesh
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College, Hanover, United States of America (USA).
Last Mile Health, Monrovia, Liberia .
Bull World Health Organ. 2017 Feb 1;95(2):113-120. doi: 10.2471/BLT.16.175513.
To assess changes in the use of essential maternal and child health services in Konobo, Liberia, after implementation of an enhanced community health worker (CHW) programme.
The Liberian Ministry of Health partnered with Last Mile Health, a nongovernmental organization, to implement a pilot CHW programme with enhanced recruitment, training, supervision and compensation. To assess changes in maternal and child health-care use, we conducted repeated cross-sectional cluster surveys before (2012) and after (2015) programme implementation.
Between 2012 and 2015, 54 CHWs, seven peer supervisors and three clinical supervisors were trained to serve a population of 12 127 people in 44 communities. The regression-adjusted percentage of children receiving care from formal care providers increased by 60.1 (95% confidence interval, CI: 51.6 to 68.7) percentage points for diarrhoea, by 30.6 (95% CI: 20.5 to 40.7) for fever and by 51.2 (95% CI: 37.9 to 64.5) for acute respiratory infection. Facility-based delivery increased by 28.2 points (95% CI: 20.3 to 36.1). Facility-based delivery and formal sector care for acute respiratory infection and diarrhoea increased more in agricultural than gold-mining communities. Receipt of one-or-more antenatal care sessions at a health facility and postnatal care within 24 hours of delivery did not change significantly.
We identified significant increases in uptake of child and maternal health-care services from formal providers during the pilot CHW programme in remote rural Liberia. Clinic-based services, such as postnatal care, and services in specific settings, such as mining areas, require additional interventions to achieve optimal outcomes.
评估在利比里亚科诺博实施强化社区卫生工作者(CHW)项目后,孕产妇和儿童基本卫生服务的使用情况变化。
利比里亚卫生部与非政府组织“最后一公里健康”合作,实施一项试点CHW项目,加强招募、培训、监督和薪酬待遇。为评估孕产妇和儿童卫生保健使用情况的变化,我们在项目实施前(2012年)和实施后(2015年)进行了重复的横断面整群调查。
2012年至2015年期间,培训了54名社区卫生工作者、7名同伴监督员和3名临床监督员,为44个社区的12127人提供服务。经回归调整后,接受正规医疗机构护理的儿童比例,腹泻增加了60.1个百分点(95%置信区间,CI:51.6至68.7),发烧增加了30.6个百分点(95%CI:20.5至40.7),急性呼吸道感染增加了51.2个百分点(95%CI:37.9至64.5)。住院分娩增加了28.2个百分点(95%CI:20.3至36.1)。农业社区急性呼吸道感染和腹泻的住院分娩及正规部门护理增加幅度大于金矿社区。在医疗机构接受一次或多次产前检查以及在分娩后24小时内接受产后护理的情况没有显著变化。
我们发现,在利比里亚偏远农村地区的试点CHW项目期间,正规医疗机构提供的儿童和孕产妇卫生保健服务的使用率显著提高。基于诊所的服务,如产后护理,以及特定环境中的服务,如矿区的服务,需要额外干预以实现最佳效果。