Abstract

Introduction: In South Africa, there are renewed efforts to strengthen primary health care and community health worker (CHW) programmes. This article examines three South African CHW programmes, a small local non-governmental organisation (NGO), a local satellite of a national NGO, and a government-initiated service, that provide a range of services from home-based care, childcare, and health promotion to assist clients in overcoming poverty-related barriers to health care.Methods: The comparative case studies, located in Eastern Cape and Gauteng, were investigated using qualitative methods. Thematic analysis was used to identify factors that constrain and enable outreach services to improve access to care.Results: The local satellite (of a national NGO), successful in addressing multi-dimensional barriers to care, provided CHWs with continuous training focused on the social determinants of ill-health, regular context-related supervision, and resources such as travel and cell-phone allowances. These workers engaged with, and linked their clients to, agencies in a wide range of sectors. Relationships with participatory structures at community level stimulated coordinated responses from service providers. In contrast, an absence of these elements curtailed the ability of CHWs in the small NGO and government-initiated service to provide effective outreach services or to improve access to care.Conclusion: Significant investment in resources, training, and support can enable CHWs to address barriers to care by negotiating with poorly functioning government services and community participation structures.

Highlights

  • In South Africa, there are renewed efforts to strengthen primary health care and community health worker (CHW) programmes

  • CHW programmes were initiated in the 1970s by nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) in response to the inadequate and intentionally inequitable primary health care (PHC) services under the apartheid government (7Á10)

  • Description of the three CHW programmes Case study 1 The Khanya programme was an independent NGO,1 initiated by a local community member that relied on funding primarily from the Gauteng Department of Health & Social Development

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Summary

Introduction

In South Africa, there are renewed efforts to strengthen primary health care and community health worker (CHW) programmes. Results: The local satellite (of a national NGO), successful in addressing multi-dimensional barriers to care, provided CHWs with continuous training focused on the social determinants of ill-health, regular contextrelated supervision, and resources such as travel and cell-phone allowances. These workers engaged with, and linked their clients to, agencies in a wide range of sectors. Since 1994, South Africa has made considerable investment in PHC through increased infrastructure, rapid expansion of TB, HIV, and maternal-health-related programmatic interventions This has been coupled with an increase in utilisation of services and the re-emergence of CHWs [6]. The NGOs described in this article form part of this diverse sector

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