Abstract
The category of community health worker applied within the context of health intervention trials has been promoted as a cost-effective approach to meeting study objectives across large populations, relying on the promotion of the concept of ‘com-munity belonging’ to encourage altruistic volunteerism from community members to promote health. This community-based category of individuals is recruited to facilitate externally driven priorities defined by large research teams, outside of the target research environment. An externally defined intervention is then ‘brought to’ the community through locally recruited community volunteers who form a bridge between the researchers and participants. The specific role of these workers is context-driven and responsive to the needs of the intervention. This paper is based on the findings from an annual evaluation of community health worker performance employed as community counsellors to deliver semi-supervised HIV self-testing (HIVST) at community level of a large HIV/TB intervention trial conducted in urban Blantyre, Malawi. A performance evaluation was conducted to appraise individual service delivery and assess achievements in meeting pre-defined targets for uptake of HIVST with the aim of improving overall uptake of HIVST. Through an empirical ‘evaluation of the evaluation’ this paper critically reflects on the position of the community volunteer through the analytical lens of ‘failure’, exploring the tensions in communication and interpretation of intervention delivery between researchers and community volunteers and the differing perspectives on defining failure. It is concluded that community interventions should be developed in collaboration with the population and that information guiding success should be clearly defined.
Highlights
This paper is based on the findings from an annual evaluation of community health volunteers employed as community counsellors to deliver semi-supervised HIV self-testing (HIVST) at community level as part of a large HIV/TB intervention trial conducted in urban Blantyre, Malawi
26 of the 28 community counsellors were found to have performed well over the previous 12-month period, each achieving over 80% adult uptake of HIVST within their cluster
This paper provides insights into the experience and definitions of failure within research
Summary
This paper is based on the findings from an annual evaluation of community health volunteers employed as community counsellors to deliver semi-supervised HIV self-testing (HIVST) at community level as part of a large HIV/TB intervention trial conducted in urban Blantyre, Malawi. Blantyre City forms the regional capital of the Southern Region, with a population of just over 1 million in 2015. Whilst there is a growing middle class in urban centres, the majority of the urban population live in high density, slum areas in closely-packed houses, many of which are rented on a temporary basis, with shared toilet facilities and water sourced through community pumps, reflecting high rates of both in and out-migration, often between the city and rural homes
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