Abstract

BackgroundCommunity Health Worker (CHW) programmes are increasingly important in HIV service delivery. CHWs’ familiarity with the local context can improve intervention acceptability and sustainability but concerns have been raised about potential exploitation and “burnout” of CHWs as they become emotionally involved in clients’ lives. Little attention has been paid to what happens at the end of time-limited CHW interventions. This study aimed to examine the experience of CHWs’ withdrawal from clients and their families.MethodsWe conducted a qualitative study of CHWs’ experiences of “exiting” from households during the ZENITH (Zimbabwe Study for Enhancing Testing and Improving Treatment of HIV in Children) intervention, which provided 12 structured home visits over 72 weeks to families with children recently diagnosed with HIV. We conducted semi-structured interviews at 12 and 18 months with all 19 CHWs delivering the intervention and 36 purposively selected caregivers who received home visits. Analysis focused on perceptions of the end of the trial, when CHWs completed the scheduled home-based visits and there was no guarantee of programme continuation beyond the study.ResultsTermination of scheduled home visits caused significant distress to both CHWs and the households they visited. We identify 3 thematic “lessons learned” for CHW programmes. First, CHWs derived pride and self-worth from emotional labour as they became integral to families’ improved ability to cope, motivating them to go beyond formal job requirements. Second, clients’ growing dependence on CHWs led to “exit” being interpreted as abandonment by both CHWs and households, causing distress on both sides. Finally, in response to anxiety about “abandoning” families, CHWs maintained contact with families long after scheduled withdrawal of services.ConclusionsCHWs can forge genuine bonds with households, creating expectations of long-term engagement. On the positive side, CHW derive pride from their work, attach social responsibility to their roles, and feel personal fulfilment in supporting families. If CHWs do not disengage from interventions as planned, or become demoralised by “exits”, interventions will prove less sustainable. CHWs are often lauded for their ability to develop trust with peers, yet this willingness and ability to create enduring emotional bonds could threaten programme delivery.

Highlights

  • Community Health Worker (CHW) programmes are increasingly important in HIV service delivery

  • Widespread use of CHWs is not without controversy, and concerns have been raised about poor remuneration, lack of opportunities for career advancement, and potential exploitation of predominantly poor and female volunteers [11,12,13]

  • We explore CHWs’ emotional involvement with their clients, perceptions of “exiting” from each household, and experiences following the end of the trial

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Summary

Introduction

Community Health Worker (CHW) programmes are increasingly important in HIV service delivery. CHWs’ familiarity with the local context can improve intervention acceptability and sustainability but concerns have been raised about potential exploitation and “burnout” of CHWs as they become emotionally involved in clients’ lives. Community Health Worker (CHW) programmes play an increasingly important role in HIV service delivery, with the current focus on maximising population-level coverage of testing and treatment [1,2,3]. CHWs perform many of the support functions necessary to a successful HIV response, including mobilising community members for regular testing, accompanying patients to clinic appointments, and providing counselling, and evidence suggests their involvement improves engagement in care and reduces treatment failure [7,8,9,10]. Addressing the emotional demands on CHWs as they become increasingly embedded in programme beneficiaries’ lives is acknowledged as a mainstay of good CHW supervision [20]

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