Abstract

BackgroundMotivation is critical to health worker performance and work quality. In Bihar, India, frontline health workers provide essential health services for the state’s poorest citizens. Yet, there is a shortfall of motivated and skilled providers and a lack of coordination between two cadres of frontline health workers and their supervisors. CARE India developed an approach aimed at improving health workers’ performance by shifting work culture and strengthening teamwork and motivation. The intervention—“Team-Based Goals and Incentives”—supported health workers to work as teams towards collective goals and rewarded success with public recognition and non-financial incentives.MethodsThirty months after initiating the intervention, 885 health workers and 98 supervisors completed an interviewer-administered questionnaire in 38 intervention and 38 control health sub-centers in one district. The questionnaire included measures of social cohesion, teamwork attitudes, self-efficacy, job satisfaction, teamwork behaviors, equitable service delivery, taking initiative, and supervisory support. We conducted bivariate analyses to examine the impact of the intervention on these psychosocial and behavioral outcomes.ResultsResults show statistically significant differences across several measures between intervention and control frontline health workers, including improved teamwork (mean = 8.8 vs. 7.3), empowerment (8.5 vs. 7.4), job satisfaction (7.1 vs. 5.99) and equitable service delivery (6.7 vs. 4.99). While fewer significant differences were found for supervisors, they reported improved teamwork (8.4 vs. 5.3), and frontline health workers reported improved fulfillment of supervisory duties by their supervisors (8.9 vs. 7.6). Both frontline health workers and supervisors found public recognition and enhanced teamwork more motivating than the non-financial incentives.ConclusionsThe Team-Based Goals and Incentives model reinforces intrinsic motivation and supports improvements in the teamwork, motivation, and performance of health workers. It offers an approach to practitioners and governments for improving the work environment in a resource-constrained setting and where there are multiple cadres of health workers.

Highlights

  • Motivation is considered critical to health worker retention and performance, as well as for other key outcomes important to work quality [1,2,3,4]

  • We developed different multi-item questionnaires for the frontline health workers (FLHWs) and the supervisors to assess the influence of Team-Based Goals and Incentives’ (TBGI) on the variables of the conceptual model

  • Intervention FLHWs performed better on outcomes related to teamwork attitudes and behaviors, including the ‘Teamwork’ psychosocial measure; ‘Perceived value of the Health Sub-Center (HSC) meeting’, where the FLHWs came together for consultation; and both the ‘Frequency of joint home visits’ and ‘Frequency of meetings attended’

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Summary

Introduction

Motivation is considered critical to health worker retention and performance, as well as for other key outcomes important to work quality [1,2,3,4]. Improving health worker motivation has been recognized as essential to achieving national and global health goals in low income countries and universal health coverage [1, 3, 4]. While several studies have reported on the determinants of health worker motivation, there are fewer studies that have explored the conceptualization or evaluated the impacts of interventions aimed at improving health worker motivation in low-income countries [1, 2, 7, 11,12,13]. Motivation is critical to health worker performance and work quality. CARE India developed an approach aimed at improving health workers’ performance by shifting work culture and strengthening teamwork and motivation. The intervention—“Team-Based Goals and Incentives”—supported health workers to work as teams towards collective goals and rewarded success with public recognition and non-financial incentives

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