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From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India

BACKGROUND: As countries like India improve access to maternal and infant care, the health systems need to develop services that enable all children to thrive. A key demographic which needs to be supported are children with disabilities, such as autism. With an estimated prevalence of one percent, t...

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Autores principales: Naithani, Lavangi, Sangwan, Priya, Roy, Sanjana Guha, Menon, Sreepriya, Azar, Zakiya, Lakhera, Shweta, Kumar, Divya, Abhilashi, Minal Kakra, Roy, Reetabrata, Vajaratkar, Vivek, Taylor, Carol, Patel, Vikram, Green, Jonathan, Divan, Gauri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9372267/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35966459
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.903341
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author Naithani, Lavangi
Sangwan, Priya
Roy, Sanjana Guha
Menon, Sreepriya
Azar, Zakiya
Lakhera, Shweta
Kumar, Divya
Abhilashi, Minal Kakra
Roy, Reetabrata
Vajaratkar, Vivek
Taylor, Carol
Patel, Vikram
Green, Jonathan
Divan, Gauri
author_facet Naithani, Lavangi
Sangwan, Priya
Roy, Sanjana Guha
Menon, Sreepriya
Azar, Zakiya
Lakhera, Shweta
Kumar, Divya
Abhilashi, Minal Kakra
Roy, Reetabrata
Vajaratkar, Vivek
Taylor, Carol
Patel, Vikram
Green, Jonathan
Divan, Gauri
author_sort Naithani, Lavangi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: As countries like India improve access to maternal and infant care, the health systems need to develop services that enable all children to thrive. A key demographic which needs to be supported are children with disabilities, such as autism. With an estimated prevalence of one percent, there are over five million young children who need services to support their needs. However, the paucity of specialist care makes access to interventions difficult. In this context a public health research not-for-profit is evaluating the effectiveness of the task-sharing approach to support the delivery of an evidenced social communication intervention for young children with autism. This paper describes the process of engaging and training the non-specialist frontline Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), who are embedded within the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare under the Delhi State Health Mission, to deliver a complex intervention for autism to inform the future scalability of services for neurodevelopmental disorders. METHODS: The present study describes the process which included (i) engagement meetings, (ii) recruitment, (iii) training, (iv) internship, and (v) competency evaluation. The shortlisted ASHAs received a 7-day classroom training followed by an internship period with practice cases. Finally, competency assessments, comprising of a test of knowledge and skills through role-plays, was administered. RESULTS: Twenty three Primary Urban Health Centers across seven districts of Delhi were approached and 408 ASHAs were engaged in initial meetings. Telephonic screening with 127 ASHAs resulted in 72 ASHAs being selected for in-person interviews. Of the 45 ASHAs who attended, 33 were shortlisted for training and 18 completed it. Fifteen ASHAs entered the internship of which 7 ASHAs achieved competency. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: There was significant attrition along the pathway to having a competent non-specialist worker deliver a complex autism intervention. The lessons learnt from this process can inform the possibility of developing a cadre of disability specific frontline health workers who can deliver evidence-based interventions for neurodevelopmental disorders under supervision.
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spelling pubmed-93722672022-08-13 From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India Naithani, Lavangi Sangwan, Priya Roy, Sanjana Guha Menon, Sreepriya Azar, Zakiya Lakhera, Shweta Kumar, Divya Abhilashi, Minal Kakra Roy, Reetabrata Vajaratkar, Vivek Taylor, Carol Patel, Vikram Green, Jonathan Divan, Gauri Front Psychiatry Psychiatry BACKGROUND: As countries like India improve access to maternal and infant care, the health systems need to develop services that enable all children to thrive. A key demographic which needs to be supported are children with disabilities, such as autism. With an estimated prevalence of one percent, there are over five million young children who need services to support their needs. However, the paucity of specialist care makes access to interventions difficult. In this context a public health research not-for-profit is evaluating the effectiveness of the task-sharing approach to support the delivery of an evidenced social communication intervention for young children with autism. This paper describes the process of engaging and training the non-specialist frontline Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), who are embedded within the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare under the Delhi State Health Mission, to deliver a complex intervention for autism to inform the future scalability of services for neurodevelopmental disorders. METHODS: The present study describes the process which included (i) engagement meetings, (ii) recruitment, (iii) training, (iv) internship, and (v) competency evaluation. The shortlisted ASHAs received a 7-day classroom training followed by an internship period with practice cases. Finally, competency assessments, comprising of a test of knowledge and skills through role-plays, was administered. RESULTS: Twenty three Primary Urban Health Centers across seven districts of Delhi were approached and 408 ASHAs were engaged in initial meetings. Telephonic screening with 127 ASHAs resulted in 72 ASHAs being selected for in-person interviews. Of the 45 ASHAs who attended, 33 were shortlisted for training and 18 completed it. Fifteen ASHAs entered the internship of which 7 ASHAs achieved competency. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: There was significant attrition along the pathway to having a competent non-specialist worker deliver a complex autism intervention. The lessons learnt from this process can inform the possibility of developing a cadre of disability specific frontline health workers who can deliver evidence-based interventions for neurodevelopmental disorders under supervision. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9372267/ /pubmed/35966459 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.903341 Text en Copyright © 2022 Naithani, Sangwan, Roy, Menon, Azar, Lakhera, Kumar, Abhilashi, Roy, Vajaratkar, Taylor, Patel, Green and Divan. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Naithani, Lavangi
Sangwan, Priya
Roy, Sanjana Guha
Menon, Sreepriya
Azar, Zakiya
Lakhera, Shweta
Kumar, Divya
Abhilashi, Minal Kakra
Roy, Reetabrata
Vajaratkar, Vivek
Taylor, Carol
Patel, Vikram
Green, Jonathan
Divan, Gauri
From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India
title From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India
title_full From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India
title_fullStr From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India
title_full_unstemmed From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India
title_short From engagement to competency: The pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in New Delhi, India
title_sort from engagement to competency: the pathway to making disability naïve frontline workers competent in the delivery of an evidence-based autism intervention in new delhi, india
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9372267/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35966459
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.903341
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