Abstract

Integrated Community Case Management of Childhood Illness (iCCM) is a policy for providing treatment for malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia for children below 5 years at the community level, which is generating increasing evidence and support at the global level. As countries move to adopt iCCM, it becomes important to understand how this growing evidence base is viewed and used by national stakeholders. This article explores whether, how and why evidence influenced policy formulation for iCCM in Niger, Kenya and Mozambique, and uses Carol Weiss’ models of research utilization to further explain the use of evidence in these contexts. A documentary review and in-depth stakeholder interviews were conducted as part of retrospective case studies in each study country. Findings indicate that all three countries used national monitoring data to identify the issue of children dying in the community prior to reaching health facilities, whereas international research evidence was used to identify policy options. Nevertheless, policymakers greatly valued local evidence and pilot projects proved critical in advancing iCCM. World Health Organization and United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) functioned as knowledge brokers, bringing research evidence and experiences from other countries to the attention of local policymakers as well as sponsoring site visits and meetings. In terms of country-specific findings, Niger demonstrated both Interactive and Political models of research utilization by using iCCM to capitalize on the existing health infrastructure. Both Mozambique and Kenya exhibit Problem-Solving research utilization with different outcomes. Furthermore, the persistent quest for additional evidence suggests a Tactical use of research in Kenya. Results presented here indicate that while evidence from research studies and other contexts can be critical to policy development, local evidence is often needed to answer key policymaker questions. In the end, evidence may not be enough to overcome resistance if the policy is viewed as incompatible with national goals.

Highlights

  • Integrated Community Case Management of Childhood Illness is a policy that encompasses the treatment of malaria with artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) and other antimalarials, treatment of diarrhoea with low-osmolarity oral rehydration salts (ORS) and zinc and treatment of pneumonia with antibiotics, all provided for children below 5 years by community health workers (CHWs) at the household and/or community level

  • We focus on three countries where iCCM policy development progressed at varying speeds to explore the use of evidence in highly variable contexts: Niger, an early adopter with full implementation of iCCM; Mozambique, where policy development moved more slowly but was adopted; and Kenya, which had yet to adopt a comprehensive iCCM policy

  • Over 80% of the Nigerien population has always been rural, health services in Niger have historically been concentrated in cities; the problem of limited access to health care was wellknown to policymakers in the 1990s and early 2000s (Korling 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Integrated Community Case Management of Childhood Illness (iCCM) is a policy that encompasses the treatment of malaria with artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) and other antimalarials, treatment of diarrhoea with low-osmolarity oral rehydration salts (ORS) and zinc and treatment of pneumonia with antibiotics, all provided for children below 5 years by community health workers (CHWs) at the household and/or community level. This policy has evolved in recent years in response to limited success of earlier child survival strategies. Despite the paucity of evidence around the integrated delivery of curative services, actors at the global level have taken pains to present iCCM as an evidence-based policy (see Dalglish, George et al in this issue for further exploration of globallevel evidence and the role of global actors) and a series of global-level statements form the basis for iCCM (WHO/UNICEF 2004a,b; 2012)

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