There is increasing interest in the role of close-to-community
providers in supporting universal health coverage, but questions remain about
the best approaches to supporting and motivating these providers, and the
optimal package they can deliver indifferent contexts and support required. We
report on the experiences of different health providers involved in a community
based intervention to support access to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in
Southern Ethiopia.
The aim of the study is to explore the experiences of health
providers in delivering a community-based tuberculosis package in southern
Ethiopia and to draw lessons for community-based programmes. A qualitative
methodology was used. Methods included in-depth interviews (IDIs, n= 37) with all health provider
groups: Community health promoters (CHPs), health extension workers (HEWs),
district supervisors and laboratory technicians were undertaken to obtain a
detailed understanding of the experiences of providers in the community based
tuberculosis package. These were complemented with cadre specific focus group
discussions (n= 3). We used
the framework approach for qualitative analysis.
The key theme that emerged was the positive impact the
community-based intervention had on vulnerable groups’ access to diagnosis,
care and treatment for tuberculosis. Providers found the positive feedback
from, and visible impact on, communities very motivating. Other themes related
to motivation and performance included supervision and support; learning new
skills; team problem solving/ addressing challenges and incentives. Against the
backdrop of the Ethiopian Health Extension Programme (HEP), HEWs were
successfully able to take on new tasks (collecting sputum and preparing smears)
with additional training and appropriate support from supervisors, laboratory
technicians and CHPs.
All categories of providers were motivated by the high
visible impact of the community-based intervention on poor and vulnerable
communities and households. HEWs role in the community-based intervention was
supported and facilitated through the structures and processes established
within the community-based intervention and the broader nation-wide Health
Extension Programme. Within community based approaches there is need to develop
context embedded strategies to support, sustain and motivate this critical cadre
who play a pivotal role in linking health systems and rural communities.
Below: The roles and relationships between different providers. The Inter-relationship between the different cadres
Full article at: http://goo.gl/a0j1W3
By: Daniel G. Datiko12, Mohammed A. Yassin3, Olivia Tulloch45*, Girum Asnake1, Tadesse Tesema1, Habiba Jamal1, Paulos Markos1, Luis E. Cuevas4 and Sally Theobald4
1TB REACH Project, Sidama Zone, Hawassa,
Ethiopia
2Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine,
Liverpool L3 5QA, UK
3Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and
Malaria, Geneva, Switzerland
4Department of International Public Health,
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK
5Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine,
Pembroke Place, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK
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