Abstract

In Mali, community health workers (CHWs) deliver essential community care (ECC) to rural populations. The dominance of external funding for the program threatens the sustainability of this critical workforce as donor financing decreases. This article summarizes results of analyses aimed at assisting Mali's decision makers and leaders in initiating a transition to a sustainable CHW program supported by domestic funding through strategic and rational investment. Data on ECC implementation norms, workforce, coverage, utilization, cost, and geospatial features were collected between 2016 and 2019. The data informed interlinked CHW financing analyses-situational, services costing, efficiency, and geospatial mapping. Analysis showed distribution of reported expenditures, estimates of required CHW funding, cost-saving options, and spatially visualized discrepancies between spending estimates and normative costs. Thirteen financing sources contributed to CHW program expenditures, 88% of which were from international donors, for a package of 23 curative, preventive, and promotive interventions. In 2015, the CHW program spent US$13.01 million; an estimated US$8.36 million would have been needed to achieve the same service volume under standard care protocols. Medicines and start-up training had US$6.88 million more than needed; supervision, program management, and recurrent training components were underfunded by US$2.2 million. Cost-saving opportunities of US$6.16 million were identified in 41 of 44 districts. Funding reallocation opportunities (after meeting technical efficiency requirements) were identified in 20 of 44 districts (US$2.56 million). Use of geospatial targeting and mapping suggests district- and village-level reallocation options for theoretical funding surpluses. CHW costs can be significantly reduced without sacrificing service technical quality. Spending can be geographically targeted to optimize service use by rural populations. Efficiency analyses provide evidence to build stronger engagement, support improved decision making, efficiently prioritize resources, and target investments for sustainable financing of CHW programs.

Highlights

  • In Mali, community health workers (CHWs) deliver essential community care (ECC) to rural populations

  • In 2015, the CHW program spent US$13 million to support 2,337 active CHWs affiliated with 84% of community health center (CHC) assigned to more than 2,000 villages across 44 health districts in the 5 southern regions of Mali plus the Bamako District

  • The program provided access to CHW-provided services to more than 3 million people living in rural areas

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Summary

Introduction

In Mali, community health workers (CHWs) deliver essential community care (ECC) to rural populations. Funding reallocation opportunities (after meeting technical efficiency requirements) were identified in 20 of 44 districts (US$2.56 million). Use of geospatial targeting and mapping suggests district- and village-level reallocation options for theoretical funding surpluses. Efficiency analyses provide evidence to build stronger engagement, support improved decision making, efficiently prioritize resources, and target investments for sustainable financing of CHW programs. Efficiency Analyses of Community Health Worker Program in Mali www.ghspjournal.org challenged to look beyond their clinical frameworks and find approaches and models that further expand the services they provide outside of the conventional hospital setting. Community health workers (CHWs) have been the cornerstone of CHSs playing a crucial role in providing preventive, promotive, and curative health services to local communities. Countries worldwide seek to leverage the skills, community knowledge, and cultural competency that CHWs can bring, connecting those most at risk for poor health outcomes with the formal health system.[1,2,3,4,5]

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