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Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation

BACKGROUND: The potential for community health workers to improve child health in sub-Saharan Africa is not well understood. Healthy Child Uganda implemented a volunteer community health worker child health promotion model in rural Uganda. An impact evaluation was conducted to assess volunteer commu...

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Autores principales: Brenner, Jennifer L., Kabakyenga, Jerome, Kyomuhangi, Teddy, Wotton, Kathryn A., Pim, Carolyn, Ntaro, Moses, Bagenda, Fred Norman, Gad, Ndaruhutse Ruzazaaza, Godel, John, Kayizzi, James, McMillan, Douglas, Mulogo, Edgar, Nettel-Aguirre, Alberto, Singhal, Nalini
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237430/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22194801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027997
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author Brenner, Jennifer L.
Kabakyenga, Jerome
Kyomuhangi, Teddy
Wotton, Kathryn A.
Pim, Carolyn
Ntaro, Moses
Bagenda, Fred Norman
Gad, Ndaruhutse Ruzazaaza
Godel, John
Kayizzi, James
McMillan, Douglas
Mulogo, Edgar
Nettel-Aguirre, Alberto
Singhal, Nalini
author_facet Brenner, Jennifer L.
Kabakyenga, Jerome
Kyomuhangi, Teddy
Wotton, Kathryn A.
Pim, Carolyn
Ntaro, Moses
Bagenda, Fred Norman
Gad, Ndaruhutse Ruzazaaza
Godel, John
Kayizzi, James
McMillan, Douglas
Mulogo, Edgar
Nettel-Aguirre, Alberto
Singhal, Nalini
author_sort Brenner, Jennifer L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The potential for community health workers to improve child health in sub-Saharan Africa is not well understood. Healthy Child Uganda implemented a volunteer community health worker child health promotion model in rural Uganda. An impact evaluation was conducted to assess volunteer community health workers' effect on child morbidity, mortality and to calculate volunteer retention. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Two volunteer community health workers were selected, trained and promoted child health in each of 116 villages (population ∼61,000) during 2006–2009. Evaluation included a household survey of mothers at baseline and post-intervention in intervention/control areas, retrospective reviews of community health worker birth/child death reports and post-intervention focus group discussions. Retention was calculated from administrative records. Main outcomes were prevalence of recent child illness/underweight status, community health worker reports of child deaths, focus group perception of effect, and community health worker retention. After 18–36 months, 86% of trained volunteers remained active. Post-intervention surveys in intervention households revealed absolute reductions of 10.2% [95%CI (−17.7%, −2.6%)] in diarrhea prevalence and 5.8% [95%CI (−11.5%, −0.003%)] in fever/malaria; comparative decreases in control households were not statistically significant. Underweight prevalence was reduced by 5.1% [95%CI (−10.7%, 0.4%)] in intervention households. Community health worker monthly reports revealed a relative decline of 53% in child deaths (<5 years old), during the first 18 months of intervention. Focus groups credited community health workers with decreasing child deaths, improved care-seeking practices, and new income-generating opportunities. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A low-cost child health promotion model using volunteer community health workers demonstrated decreased child morbidity, dramatic mortality trend declines and high volunteer retention. This sustainable model could be scaled-up to sub-Saharan African communities with limited resources and high child health needs.
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spelling pubmed-32374302011-12-22 Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation Brenner, Jennifer L. Kabakyenga, Jerome Kyomuhangi, Teddy Wotton, Kathryn A. Pim, Carolyn Ntaro, Moses Bagenda, Fred Norman Gad, Ndaruhutse Ruzazaaza Godel, John Kayizzi, James McMillan, Douglas Mulogo, Edgar Nettel-Aguirre, Alberto Singhal, Nalini PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The potential for community health workers to improve child health in sub-Saharan Africa is not well understood. Healthy Child Uganda implemented a volunteer community health worker child health promotion model in rural Uganda. An impact evaluation was conducted to assess volunteer community health workers' effect on child morbidity, mortality and to calculate volunteer retention. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Two volunteer community health workers were selected, trained and promoted child health in each of 116 villages (population ∼61,000) during 2006–2009. Evaluation included a household survey of mothers at baseline and post-intervention in intervention/control areas, retrospective reviews of community health worker birth/child death reports and post-intervention focus group discussions. Retention was calculated from administrative records. Main outcomes were prevalence of recent child illness/underweight status, community health worker reports of child deaths, focus group perception of effect, and community health worker retention. After 18–36 months, 86% of trained volunteers remained active. Post-intervention surveys in intervention households revealed absolute reductions of 10.2% [95%CI (−17.7%, −2.6%)] in diarrhea prevalence and 5.8% [95%CI (−11.5%, −0.003%)] in fever/malaria; comparative decreases in control households were not statistically significant. Underweight prevalence was reduced by 5.1% [95%CI (−10.7%, 0.4%)] in intervention households. Community health worker monthly reports revealed a relative decline of 53% in child deaths (<5 years old), during the first 18 months of intervention. Focus groups credited community health workers with decreasing child deaths, improved care-seeking practices, and new income-generating opportunities. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A low-cost child health promotion model using volunteer community health workers demonstrated decreased child morbidity, dramatic mortality trend declines and high volunteer retention. This sustainable model could be scaled-up to sub-Saharan African communities with limited resources and high child health needs. Public Library of Science 2011-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3237430/ /pubmed/22194801 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027997 Text en Brenner et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Brenner, Jennifer L.
Kabakyenga, Jerome
Kyomuhangi, Teddy
Wotton, Kathryn A.
Pim, Carolyn
Ntaro, Moses
Bagenda, Fred Norman
Gad, Ndaruhutse Ruzazaaza
Godel, John
Kayizzi, James
McMillan, Douglas
Mulogo, Edgar
Nettel-Aguirre, Alberto
Singhal, Nalini
Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation
title Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation
title_full Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation
title_fullStr Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation
title_short Can Volunteer Community Health Workers Decrease Child Morbidity and Mortality in Southwestern Uganda? An Impact Evaluation
title_sort can volunteer community health workers decrease child morbidity and mortality in southwestern uganda? an impact evaluation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3237430/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22194801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027997
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