Performance of community health workers: situating their intermediary position within complex adaptive health systems

Maryse C Kok, Jacqueline E W Broerse, Sally Theobald, Hermen Ormel, Marjolein Dieleman, Miriam Taegtmeyer

Research output: Contribution to JournalReview articleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Health systems are social institutions, in which health worker performance is shaped by transactional processes between different actors.This analytical assessment unravels the complex web of factors that influence the performance of community health workers (CHWs) in low- and middle-income countries. It examines their unique intermediary position between the communities they serve and actors in the health sector, and the complexity of the health systems in which they operate. The assessment combines evidence from the international literature on CHW programmes with research outcomes from the 5-year REACHOUT consortium, undertaking implementation research to improve CHW performance in six contexts (two in Asia and four in Africa). A conceptual framework on CHW performance, which explicitly conceptualizes the interface role of CHWs, is presented. Various categories of factors influencing CHW performance are distinguished in the framework: the context, the health system and intervention hardware and the health system and intervention software. Hardware elements of CHW interventions comprise the supervision systems, training, accountability and communication structures, incentives, supplies and logistics. Software elements relate to the ideas, interests, relationships, power, values and norms of the health system actors. They influence CHWs' feelings of connectedness, familiarity, self-fulfilment and serving the same goals and CHWs' perceptions of support received, respect, competence, honesty, fairness and recognition.The framework shines a spotlight on the need for programmes to pay more attention to ideas, interests, relationships, power, values and norms of CHWs, communities, health professionals and other actors in the health system, if CHW performance is to improve.

Original languageEnglish
Article number59
Pages (from-to)59
JournalHuman Resources for Health
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Sept 2017

Funding

The REACHOUT programme has received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme ([FP7/2007-2013] [FP7/2007-2011]) under grant agreement no 306090.

FundersFunder number
FP7/2007
Seventh Framework Programme306090
Seventh Framework Programme

    Keywords

    • Journal Article
    • Review

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