Abstract

BackgroundTanzania has been a pioneer in establishing community-level services, yet challenges remain in sustaining these systems and ensuring adequate human resource strategies. In particular, the added value of a cadre of professional community health workers is under debate. While Tanzania has the highest density of primary health care facilities in Africa, equitable access and quality of care remain a challenge. Utilization for many services proven to reduce child and maternal mortality is unacceptably low. Tanzanian policy initiatives have sought to address these problems by proposing expansion of community-based providers, but the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare (MoHSW ) lacks evidence that this merits national implementation. The Tanzania Connect Project is a randomized cluster trial located in three rural districts with a population of roughly 360,000 ( Kilombero, Rufiji, and Ulanga).Description of interventionConnect aims to test whether introducing a community health worker into a general program of health systems strengthening and referral improvement will reduce child mortality, improve access to services, expand utilization, and alter reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health seeking behavior; thereby accelerating progress towards Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5. Connect has introduced a new cadre — Community Health Agents (CHA) — who were recruited from and work in their communities. To support the CHA, Connect developed supervisory systems, launched information and monitoring operations, and implemented logistics support for integration with existing district and village operations. In addition, Connect’s district-wide emergency referral strengthening intervention includes clinical and operational improvements.Evaluation designDesigned as a community-based cluster-randomized trial, CHA were randomly assigned to 50 of the 101 villages within the Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) in the three study districts. To garner detailed information on household characteristics, behaviors, and service exposure, a random sub-sample survey of 3,300 women of reproductive age will be conducted at the baseline and endline. The referral system intervention will use baseline, midline, and endline facility-based data to assess systemic changes. Implementation and impact research of Connect will assess whether and how the presence of the CHA at village level provides added life-saving value to the health system.DiscussionGlobal commitment to launching community-based primary health care has accelerated in recent years, with much of the implementation focused on Africa. Despite extensive investment, no program has been guided by a truly experimental study. Connect will not only address Tanzania’s need for policy and operational research, it will bridge a critical international knowledge gap concerning the added value of salaried professional community health workers in the context of a high density of fixed facilities.Trial registration: ISRCTN96819844

Highlights

  • Tanzania has been a pioneer in establishing community-level services, yet challenges remain in sustaining these systems and ensuring adequate human resource strategies

  • Global commitment to launching community-based primary health care has accelerated in recent years, with much of the implementation focused on Africa

  • Evaluation design The evaluation of the added value of the Community Health Agents (CHA) is designed as a community-based cluster-randomized trial set in three Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSS) villages to measure reductions in child mortality and outcomes related to reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health

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Summary

Discussion

113 CHA have been deployed to all 50 randomly selected intervention villages as planned. List of abbreviations used ANC: Antenatal care; BCG: Bacillus Calmette-Guerin; CAG: Connect Advisory Group; CHA: Community health agent; CHMT: Council Health Management Team; DHS: Demographic and health survey; EmOC: Emergency obstetric care; ENC: Essential newborn care; HDSS: Health and Demographic Surveillance System; IHI: Ifakara Health Institute; IMCI: Integrated management of childhood illness; MDG: Millennium Development Goal; MMAM: Mpango wa Maendeleo wa Afya ya Msingi (Swahili acronym for the Tanzanian government’s primary health services development program); MNCH: Maternal, newborn, and child health; MoHSW: Ministry of Health and Social Welfare; MSPH: Mailman School of Public Health; RCH: Reproductive child health; TEHIP: Tanzania Essential Health Interventions Project; TTCIH: Tanzanian Training Center for International Health; VHW: Village health worker; WHO: World Health Organization. Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests

Background
CHAs patient referral
Jonsson U
United Republic of Tanzania
23. The CDI Study Group
72. Ki-Moon B
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