Department of Disease Control and Environmental Health, School of Public Health, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Health Policy, Planning and Management, School of Public Health, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
Hum Resour Health. 2018 Aug 22;16(1):41. doi: 10.1186/s12960-018-0306-8.
Community health workers (CHWs) are an important human resource in Uganda as they are the first contact of the population with the health system. Understanding gendered roles of CHWs is important in establishing how they influence their performance and relationships in communities. This paper explores the differential roles of male and female CHWs in rural Wakiso district, Uganda, using photovoice, an innovative community-based participatory research approach.
We trained ten CHWs (five males and five females) on key concepts about gender and photovoice. The CHWs took photographs for 5 months on their gender-related roles which were discussed in monthly meetings. The discussions from the meetings were recorded, transcribed, and translated to English, and emerging data were analysed using content analysis in Atlas ti version 6.0.15.
Although responsibilities were the same for both male and female CHWs, they reported that in practice, CHWs were predominantly involved in different types of work depending on their gender. Social norms led to men being more comfortable seeking care from male CHWs and females turning to female CHWs. Due to their privileged ownership and access to motorcycles, male CHWs were noted to be able to assist patients faster with referrals to facilities during health emergencies, cover larger geographic distances during community mobilization activities, and take up supervisory responsibilities. Due to the gendered division of labour in communities, male CHWs were also observed to be more involved in manual work such as cleaning wells. The gendered division of labour also reinforced female caregiving roles related to child care, and also made female CHWs more available to address local problems.
CHWs reflected both strategic and conformist gendered implications of their community work. The differing roles and perspectives about the nature of male and female CHWs while performing their roles should be considered while designing and implementing CHW programmes, without further retrenching gender inequalities or norms.
社区卫生工作者(CHW)是乌干达的重要人力资源,因为他们是民众与卫生系统的第一接触者。了解 CHW 的性别角色对于了解他们如何影响其在社区中的表现和关系非常重要。本文使用摄影心声,一种创新的基于社区的参与式研究方法,探讨了乌干达瓦基索农村地区男女 CHW 的不同角色。
我们培训了十名 CHW(五男五女),让他们了解性别和摄影心声的关键概念。CHW 拍摄了五个月与他们的性别相关的角色的照片,这些照片在每月的会议上进行了讨论。会议讨论记录、转录并翻译成英文,使用 Atlas ti 版本 6.0.15 进行内容分析。
尽管男性和女性 CHW 的职责相同,但他们报告说,实际上,CHW 主要根据自己的性别从事不同类型的工作。社会规范导致男性更愿意向男性 CHW 寻求医疗保健,而女性则转向女性 CHW。由于他们拥有和使用摩托车的特权,男性 CHW 在紧急情况下能够更快地协助患者转诊到医疗机构,在社区动员活动中覆盖更大的地理距离,并承担监督责任。由于社区中存在性别分工,男性 CHW 也被观察到更参与清洁水井等体力劳动。性别分工也强化了女性与儿童护理相关的照顾角色,使女性 CHW 更能解决当地问题。
CHW 反映了他们社区工作的战略和顺应性别规范的影响。在设计和实施 CHW 计划时,应考虑男女 CHW 在履行职责时的不同角色和观点,而不会进一步削弱性别不平等或规范。