Abstract

The re-engineering of primary health care (PHC) called for the establishment of ward-based outreach teams as a reform strategy to bridge the gap between health facilities and communities. The Nkangala district established ward-based outreach teams in 2012. We used process evaluation to assess the acceptability of the outreach teams from the perspectives of those involved in the implementation as well as the clients who are the recipients of the outreach services in order to describe how the programme benefits the recipients, the staff, and the health system. Data were collected through interviews with multiple data sources. A thematic analysis was done using NVivo 11. The outreach programme is acceptable to the recipients and staff. The acceptability translated into measurable benefits for the recipients and the health system. Health benefits included increased access to services, support for treatment adherence, and linkages to various sector departments for social support. Since the inception of outreach teams, the district has recorded low utilisation of PHC services and improved priority indicators such as immunisation coverage, early antenatal bookings, treatment adherence, TB cure rates, and decreased default rates. The positive effects of the outreach teams on indicators underscore the need to roll the programme out to all sub-districts.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe re-engineering of primary health care strategy recommended, among a number of reforms, the adoption of a ward-based outreach team strategy to strengthen health promotion, identifying individuals and families at high risk of disease, and building links between households and health care facilities

  • The National Department of Health in South Africa introduced the re-engineering of primary health care strategy as one of the reforms in a set of health system reforms in 2011

  • The ward-based outreach team (WBOT) programme in South Africa is aimed at addressing the limitations previously experienced with community-based health services for vulnerable communities in priority settings like rural areas

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Summary

Introduction

The re-engineering of primary health care strategy recommended, among a number of reforms, the adoption of a ward-based outreach team strategy to strengthen health promotion, identifying individuals and families at high risk of disease, and building links between households and health care facilities. The ward-based outreach team (WBOT) programme in South Africa is aimed at addressing the limitations previously experienced with community-based health services for vulnerable communities in priority settings like rural areas. The key to achieving better health outcomes is a reform of South Africa’s health care system—moving from an individualised, passive, curative, and vertical system to a population-based, integrated, and proactive primary health care model [3]. The re-engineering of primary health care aims to support a preventive and health-promoting community-based PHC

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