Department of Public Health, College of Life Sciences, Brigham Young University, 2032 LSB, Provo, UT, 84602, USA.
Department of Health Policy and Management, University of California Los Angeles, Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Sep 17;21(1):979. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-06996-y.
Community health worker (CHW) motivation is an important factor related to health service quality and CHW program sustainability in low- and middle-income countries. Financial and non-financial motivators may influence CHW behavior through two dimensions of motivation: desire to perform and effort expended. The aim of this study was to explore how the removal of performance-based financial incentives impacted CHW motivation after formal funding ceased for Alive and Thrive (A&T), an infant and young child feeding (IYCF) program in Bangladesh.
This qualitative study included seven focus groups (n = 43 respondents) with paid supervisors of volunteer CHWs tasked with delivering interpersonal IYCF counseling services. Data were transcribed, translated into English, and then analyzed using both a priori themes and a grounded theory approach.
Results suggest the removal of financial incentives was perceived to have negatively impacted CHWs' desire to perform in three primary ways: 1) a decreased desire to work without financial compensation, 2) changes in pre- and post-intervention motivation, and 3) household income challenges due to dependence on incentives. Removal of financial incentives was perceived to have negatively impacted CHWs' level of effort expended in four primary ways: 1) a reduction in CHW visits, 2) a reduction in quality of care, 3) CHW attrition, and 4) substitution of other income-generating activities.
This study provides new evidence regarding how removing performance-based financial incentives from a CHW program can negatively impact CHW motivation. The findings suggest that program decision makers should consider how to construct community health work programs such that CHWs may continue to receive performance-based compensation after the original funding ceases.
社区卫生工作者(CHW)的激励是与低收入和中等收入国家的卫生服务质量和 CHW 项目可持续性相关的一个重要因素。财务和非财务激励因素可能通过激励的两个维度影响 CHW 的行为:表现意愿和付出的努力。本研究旨在探讨在 Alive and Thrive(A&T)停止正式供资后,即孟加拉国婴幼儿喂养(IYCF)计划,取消基于绩效的财务激励措施如何影响 CHW 的激励。
这项定性研究包括与负责提供人际 IYCF 咨询服务的志愿者 CHW 的付费主管进行的 7 次焦点小组(n=43 名受访者)。数据被转录、翻译成英文,然后使用先验主题和扎根理论方法进行分析。
结果表明,取消财务激励措施被认为以三种主要方式对 CHW 的表现意愿产生了负面影响:1)没有财务补偿的工作意愿降低;2)干预前后动机的变化;3)由于依赖激励措施,家庭收入受到挑战。取消财务激励措施被认为对 CHW 付出的努力水平产生了负面影响,主要有以下四种方式:1)CHW 访问次数减少;2)护理质量下降;3)CHW 流失;4)替代其他创收活动。
本研究提供了关于从 CHW 计划中取消基于绩效的财务激励措施如何对 CHW 激励产生负面影响的新证据。研究结果表明,项目决策者应考虑如何构建社区卫生工作者计划,以便在最初资金停止后,CHW 仍可以继续获得基于绩效的补偿。