Abstract

BackgroundMany Community Health Workers (CHWs) experience the same socioeconomic and health needs as their neighbors, given that they are by definition part of their communities. Yet very few studies aim to measure and characterize experiences of deprivation, poverty, and wellbeing among community health workers. This study quantitatively examines deprivation and wellbeing in Ethiopia’s Women’s Development Army (WDA), a massive unpaid community health workforce intended to improve population health and modernize the country.MethodsWe conducted a survey of 422 volunteer WDA leaders and community members in rural Amhara state, part of a mixed-methods ethnographic study of the experiences of women in the WDA. The survey asked a variety of questions about respondents’ demographics, education, assets, and access to government services. We also used survey measures to evaluate respondents’ levels of household food and water security, stressful life events, social support, work burden, and psychological distress.ResultsVolunteer WDA leaders and community members alike tend to have very low levels of schooling and household assets, and to be heavily burdened with daily work in several domains. Large proportions are food and water insecure, many are in debt, and many experience stretches of time with no money at all. Our survey also revealed differences between volunteer WDA leaders and other women that warrant attention. Leaders are less likely to be married and more likely to be divorced or separated. Leaders are also more likely to experience some aspects of food insecurity and report greater levels of psychological distress and more stressful life events. They also report slightly less social support than other women.ConclusionsIn rural Amhara, women who seek out and/or are sought and recruited for leader roles in the WDA are a population living in precarity. In several domains, they experience even more hardship than their neighbors. These findings highlight a need for careful attention and further research into processes of volunteer CHW selection, and to determine whether or not volunteering for CHW programs increases socioeconomic and health risks among volunteers. CHW programs in settings of poverty should stop using unpaid labor and seek to create more paid CHW jobs.

Highlights

  • Many Community Health Workers (CHWs) experience the same socioeconomic and health needs as their neighbors, given that they are by definition part of their communities

  • As community health workers often target populations living in poverty [3], it follows that CHWs themselves tend to live in poverty and experience various forms of deprivation

  • We report Cronbach’s alpha as a measure of scale reliability for our measures of food insecurity, water insecurity, social support, and psychological distress

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Summary

Introduction

Many Community Health Workers (CHWs) experience the same socioeconomic and health needs as their neighbors, given that they are by definition part of their communities. Much of the research evidence on community health workers is focused on improving job performance, in a cost-effective manner [4,5,6,7,8,9]. In this literature on CHW effectiveness, consideration of whether the socioeconomic and health needs facing their communities are directly affecting CHWs themselves remains in the background. There is a significant risk that research focused on cost-effective job performance improvements, without foregrounding information on CHWs’ socioeconomic vulnerabilities, can further policies that encourage CHW exploitation and deepen inequality and deprivation [10, 11]

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