Abstract
BackgroundGeographic Information Systems (GIS) have become an important tool in monitoring and improving health services, particularly at local levels. However, GIS data are often unavailable in rural settings and village-level mapping is resource-intensive. This study describes the use of community health workers’ (CHW) supervisors to map villages in a mountainous rural district of Northern Rwanda and subsequent use of these data to map village-level variability in safe water availability.MethodsWe developed a low literacy and skills-focused training in the local language (Kinyarwanda) to train 86 CHW Supervisors and 25 nurses in charge of community health at the health center (HC) and health post (HP) levels to collect the geographic coordinates of the villages using Global Positioning Systems (GPS). Data were validated through meetings with key stakeholders at the sub-district and district levels and joined using ArcMap 10 Geo-processing tools. Costs were calculated using program budgets and activities’ records, and compared with the estimated costs of mapping using a separate, trained GIS team. To demonstrate the usefulness of this work, we mapped drinking water sources (DWS) from data collected by CHW supervisors from the chief of the village. DWSs were categorized as safe versus unsafe using World Health Organization definitions.ResultFollowing training, each CHW Supervisor spent five days collecting data on the villages in their coverage area. Over 12 months, the CHW supervisors mapped the district’s 573 villages using 12 shared GPS devices. Sector maps were produced and distributed to local officials. The cost of mapping using CHW supervisors was $29,692, about two times less than the estimated cost of mapping using a trained and dedicated GIS team ($60,112). The availability of local mapping was able to rapidly identify village-level disparities in DWS, with lower access in populations living near to lakes and wetlands (p < .001).ConclusionExisting national CHW system can be leveraged to inexpensively and rapidly map villages even in mountainous rural areas. These data are important to provide managers and decision makers with local-level GIS data to rapidly identify variability in health and other related services to better target and evaluate interventions.
Highlights
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have become an important tool in monitoring and improving health services, at local levels
Burera, a mountainous rural district with poor road access, we adapted a community participatory approach to conduct villagelevel mapping. We describe this approach of leveraging Rwanda’s national community health workers’ (CHW) program to map village locations, and demonstrate the utility of this process through identification of geographic disparities in critical services through mapping of village-level access to safe water
Costs The total cost of mapping using CHW supervisors was $29,692, compared to the $60,112 cost which would have been needed for mapping using the existing GIS team of Partners In Health/Inshuti Mu Buzima (PIH/IMB)
Summary
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) have become an important tool in monitoring and improving health services, at local levels. The spread of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) – a set of tools to capture, store, transform, analyse, and display spatial data –has improved spatial analysis of health related services and population health [1,2,3,4]. The United Nations (UN) Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the World Summit on the Information Society suggested utilization of a participatory approach to promote equal access to information and knowledge sharing [13]. This approach could offer a relatively low resource method to map communities in rural settings
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have