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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Research article

Identifying gaps in the practices of rural health extension workers in Ethiopia: a task analysis study

Authors: Firew Ayalew Desta, Girma Temam Shifa, Damtew WoldeMariam Dagoye, Catherine Carr, Jos Van Roosmalen, Jelle Stekelenburg, Assefa Bulcha Nedi, Adrienne Kols, Young Mi Kim

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Health extension workers (HEWs) are the frontline health workers for Ethiopia’s primary health care system. The Federal Ministry of Health is seeking to upgrade and increase the number of HEWs, particularly in remote areas, and address concerns about HEWs’ pre-service education and practices. The aim of this study was to identify gaps in HEWs’ practices and recommend changes in their training and scope of practice.

Methods

A cross-sectional descriptive task analysis was conducted to assess the work of rural HEWs who had been in practice for six months to five years. One hundred participants were invited from 100 health posts in five regions of Ethiopia. HEWs self-reported on 62 tasks on: frequency, criticality (importance), where the task was learned, and ability to perform the task. Descriptive statistics, including frequencies and percentages, were computed for each variable. Task combinations were examined to identify tasks performed infrequently or for which HEWs are inadequately prepared.

Results

A total of 82 rural HEWs participated in the study. Nearly all HEWs rated every task as highly critical to individual and public health outcomes. On average, most HEWs (51.5%–57.4%) reported learning hygiene and environmental sanitation tasks, disease prevention and control tasks, family health tasks, and health education and communication tasks outside of their pre-service education, primarily through in-service and on-the-job training. Over half of HEWs reported performing certain critical tasks infrequently, including management of supplies, stocks and maintenance at the facility and management of the cold chain system. Almost all HEWs (95.7–97.2%) perceived themselves as competent and proficient in performing tasks in all program areas.

Conclusion

HEWs were insufficiently prepared during pre-service education for all tasks that fall within their scope of practice. Many learned tasks through in-service or on-the-job training, and some tasks were not learned at all. Some tasks that are part of expected HEW practice were performed infrequently, potentially reducing the effectiveness of the Health Extension Program to provide preventive and basic curative health care services to communities. Findings should alert policy makers to the need to review HEWs’ scope of practice, update pre-service education curricula and prioritize in-service training modules.
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Metadata
Title
Identifying gaps in the practices of rural health extension workers in Ethiopia: a task analysis study
Authors
Firew Ayalew Desta
Girma Temam Shifa
Damtew WoldeMariam Dagoye
Catherine Carr
Jos Van Roosmalen
Jelle Stekelenburg
Assefa Bulcha Nedi
Adrienne Kols
Young Mi Kim
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-017-2804-0

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