Friends for International TB Relief, 1/21 Le Van Luong St., Nhan Chinh Ward, Thanh Xuan District, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Department of Global Public Health, WHO Collaboration Centre on Tuberculosis and Social Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Solnavägen 1, 171 77, Solna, Sweden.
Hum Resour Health. 2022 Mar 12;20(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s12960-022-00708-1.
In the field of tuberculosis (TB), Community Healthcare Workers (CHWs) have been engaged for advocacy, case detection, and patient support in a wide range of settings. Estimates predict large-scale shortfalls of healthcare workers in low- and middle-income settings by 2030 and strategies are needed to optimize the health workforce to achieve universal availability and accessibility of healthcare. In 2018, the World Health Organization (WHO) published guidelines on best practices for CHW engagement, and identified remaining knowledge gaps. Stop TB Partnership's TB REACH initiative has supported interventions using CHWs to deliver TB care in over 30 countries, and utilized the same primary indicator to measure project impact at the population-level for all TB active case finding projects, which makes the results comparable across multiple settings. This study compiled 10 years of implementation data from the initiative's grantee network to begin to address key knowledge gaps in CHW networks.
We conducted a cross-sectional study analyzing the TB REACH data repository (n = 123) and primary survey responses (n = 50) of project implementers. We designed a survey based on WHO guidelines to understand projects' practices on CHW recruitment, training, activities, supervision, compensation, and sustainability. We segmented projects by TB notification impact and fitted linear random-effect regression models to identify practices associated with higher changes in notifications.
Most projects employed CHWs for advocacy alongside case finding and holding activities. Model characteristics associated with higher project impact included incorporating e-learning in training and having the prospect of CHWs continuing their responsibilities at the close of a project. Factors that trended towards being associated with higher impact were community-based training, differentiated contracts, and non-monetary incentives.
In line with WHO guidelines, our findings emphasize that successful implementation approaches provide CHWs with comprehensive training, continuous supervision, fair compensation, and are integrated within the existing primary healthcare system. However, we encountered a great degree of heterogeneity in CHW engagement models, resulting in few practices clearly associated with higher notifications.
在结核病(TB)领域,社区卫生工作者(CHW)已在广泛的环境中参与宣传、病例发现和患者支持。估计到 2030 年,中低收入国家将出现大量卫生工作者短缺,需要采取策略优化卫生人力,实现医疗保健的普遍可及性。2018 年,世界卫生组织(WHO)发布了关于 CHW 参与的最佳实践指南,并确定了尚存的知识空白。遏制结核病伙伴关系的结核病 REACH 倡议支持利用 CHW 提供结核病护理的干预措施,在 30 多个国家开展工作,并利用相同的主要指标衡量所有结核病活动性病例发现项目的人口一级项目影响,使结果在多个环境中具有可比性。本研究汇编了倡议的受赠者网络 10 年来的实施数据,开始解决 CHW 网络中的关键知识空白。
我们对结核病 REACH 数据存储库(n=123)和项目实施者的主要调查答复(n=50)进行了横断面研究。我们根据世卫组织指南设计了一项调查,以了解项目在 CHW 招聘、培训、活动、监督、薪酬和可持续性方面的实践。我们根据结核病通知影响对项目进行分段,并拟合线性随机效应回归模型,以确定与通知变化更高相关的实践。
大多数项目都雇佣 CHW 进行宣传以及病例发现和开展活动。与更高项目影响相关的模型特征包括在培训中纳入电子学习以及在项目结束时 CHW 有机会继续履行职责。与更高影响趋势相关的因素是基于社区的培训、有区别的合同和非货币激励。
与世卫组织指南一致,我们的研究结果强调,成功的实施方法为 CHW 提供全面的培训、持续的监督、公平的薪酬,并将其纳入现有初级保健系统。然而,我们在 CHW 参与模式方面遇到了很大的异质性,导致很少有实践与更高的通知明显相关。