School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, South Africa
Technical Advice and Partnerships, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Geneva, Switzerland.
BMJ Glob Health. 2021 Jun;6(6). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005238.
Little is known about the contribution of community health posts and community health workers (CHWs) to geographical accessibility of primary healthcare (PHC) services at community level and strategies for optimising geographical accessibility to these services.
Using a complete georeferenced census of community health posts and CHWs in Niger and other high-resolution spatial datasets, we modelled travel times to community health posts and CHWs between 2000 and 2013, accounting for training, commodities and maximum population capacity. We estimated additional CHWs needed to optimise geographical accessibility of the population beyond the reach of the existing community health post network. We assessed the efficiency of geographical targeting of the existing community health post network compared with networks designed to optimise geographical targeting of the estimated population, under-5 deaths and malaria cases.
The per cent of the population within 60-minute walking to the nearest community health post with a CHW increased from 0.0% to 17.5% between 2000 and 2013. An estimated 10.4 million people (58.5%) remained beyond a 60-minute catchment of community health posts. Optimal deployment of 7741 additional CHWs could increase geographical coverage from 41.5% to 82.9%. Geographical targeting of the existing community health post network was inefficient but optimised networks could improve efficiency by 32.3%-47.1%, depending on targeting metric.
We provide the first estimates of geographical accessibility to community health posts and CHWs at national scale in Niger, highlighting improvements between 2000 and 2013, geographies where gaps remained and approaches for optimising geographical accessibility to PHC services at community level.
对于社区卫生岗位和社区卫生工作者(CHWs)对社区一级初级卫生保健(PHC)服务的地理可达性的贡献,以及优化这些服务的地理可达性的策略,人们知之甚少。
利用尼日尔社区卫生岗位和 CHWs 的完整地理参考普查数据以及其他高分辨率空间数据集,我们模拟了 2000 年至 2013 年期间前往社区卫生岗位和 CHWs 的旅行时间,考虑了培训、商品和最大人口容量。我们估计了需要增加多少名 CHWs 才能优化现有社区卫生岗位网络无法覆盖的人口的地理可达性。我们评估了现有社区卫生岗位网络的地理定位效率与旨在优化估计人口、5 岁以下儿童死亡和疟疾病例的地理定位的网络相比的效率。
在 2000 年至 2013 年间,60 分钟步行范围内有 CHW 的社区卫生岗位的人口比例从 0.0%增加到 17.5%。估计仍有 1040 万人(58.5%)无法到达社区卫生岗位 60 分钟的覆盖范围。最佳部署 7741 名额外的 CHWs 可将地理覆盖范围从 41.5%提高到 82.9%。现有社区卫生岗位网络的地理定位效率不高,但优化后的网络可提高 32.3%-47.1%的效率,具体取决于目标指标。
我们首次在全国范围内提供了对社区卫生岗位和 CHWs 的地理可达性的估计,突出了 2000 年至 2013 年间的改进、仍存在差距的地理区域以及优化社区一级 PHC 服务的地理可达性的方法。