Abstract

BackgroundThe mixed-gender community health worker (CHW) program in Mozambique is a window into the different experiences that male and female CHWs may face in their work. The objective of this study is to investigate how gender influenced the experiences of community health workers using the PIERS on the Move (POM) mHealth app in Mozambique.MethodsThis is a secondary analysis by gender of health care workers involved in the Mozambique Community Level Intervention for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomized trial (NCT01911494). A structured survey with 10 open-ended questions was used to elicit CHW experiences using the POM app. Data collection took place in 2017 after completion of the CLIP trial. This analysis examined emergent themes to consider how experiences may have been shaped by health worker gender.ResultsOf the 43 CHWs who used the POM app, there were 31 (72%) women and 12 (28%) men. Gender differences emerged in descriptions of how using POM increased their value and respect by pregnant women and community members. Fifty-eight percent of female CHWs (18/31) said that POM positively influenced their status in the community in comparison to 33% of their male counterparts (4/12). While the small sample sizes, particularly of male CHWs who used POM, preclude conclusions, these findings were supported by qualitative results. Female CHWs tended to elaborate more about community perceptions of their increased value and status as health care providers than male CHWs.ConclusionCHWs work within existing gender norms. While gender norms are perceived to support the comfort of women to speak to another woman about their maternal and child health issues, gender norms also work against female CHWs as their professionalism may be questioned more than for their male counterparts. CHW's narratives suggested that the mHealth intervention was valued beyond the technology itself because it also added symbolic clinical value and demonstrated a tangible investment in their professional capacities, which may have been especially appreciated by the female CHWs.

Highlights

  • Gender equality is highlighted among the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as fundamental to well-being at all ages (SDG 3) [1]

  • Though the process to become a community health workers (CHWs) in Mozambique includes 4 months of training and marked by a graduation ceremony, narratives especially from female CHWs in our study suggested that it took further training and performance of Mobile health (mHealth) procedures with clinical activities for many to feel recognized as a healthcare worker in their communities

  • The emphasis female CHWs in our study placed on certain topics, such as increased respect and status as a true health professional, suggest the influence of gender in the health systems and communities they live and work in

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Summary

Introduction

Gender equality is highlighted among the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as fundamental to well-being at all ages (SDG 3) [1]. Digital health holds potential to be gender transformative through improved health-seeking among women as well as supporting the skills, social status and effectiveness of community health workers (CHWs) [2]. CHWs in LMICs are often women, they are notoriously underpaid or volunteer and little attention is paid to their experiences using mHealth and gendered experiences in their communities [3,4,5]. The mixed-gender program in Mozambique is a window into the different experiences that male and female community health workers face. The mixed-gender community health worker (CHW) program in Mozambique is a window into the different experiences that male and female CHWs may face in their work. The objective of this study is to investigate how gender influenced the experiences of community health workers using the PIERS on the Move (POM) mHealth app in Mozambique

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