Supporting the utilization of community-based primary health care implementation research in Ghana

被引:3
|
作者
Awoonor-Williams, John Koku [1 ]
Phillips, James F. [2 ]
Aboba, Mathias [1 ]
Vadrevu, Lalitha [2 ]
Azasi, Esther [3 ]
Tiah, Janet Awopole Yepakeh [4 ]
Schmitt, Margaret L. [5 ]
Patel, Sneha [2 ]
Sheff, Mallory C. [2 ]
Kachur, S. Patrick [2 ]
机构
[1] Ghana Hlth Serv, Policy Planning Monitoring & Evaluat Div, Private Mail Bag, Accra, Ghana
[2] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, Heilbrunn Dept Populat & Family Hlth, 60 Haven Ave,B-2, New York, NY 10032 USA
[3] Queen Margaret Univ, Inst Global Hlth & Dev, Edinburgh EH21 6UU, Midlothian, Scotland
[4] US Agcy Int Dev METSS Project, 10 Wuogon Cl, Accra, Ghana
[5] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Sociomed Sci, New York, NY 10032 USA
关键词
Ghana; community-based primary health care; community-based health planning and services; knowledge management; learning health system; implementation science; health systems strengthening; knowledge curation; research utilization; scaling up;
D O I
10.1093/heapol/czab156
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Ever since the 1990s, implementation research in Ghana has guided the development of policies and practices that are essential to establishing community-based primary health care. In response to evidence emerging from this research, the Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) policy was promulgated in 1999 to scale-up results. However, during the first decade of CHPS operation, national monitoring showed that its pace of coverage expansion was unacceptably slow. In 2010, the Ghana Health Service launched a 5-year plausibility trial of CHPS reform for testing ways to accelerate scale-up. This initiative, known as the Ghana Essential Health Intervention Program (GEHIP), included a knowledge management component for establishing congruence of knowledge generation and flow with the operational system that GEHIP evidence was intended to reform. Four Upper East Region districts served as trial areas, while seven districts were comparison areas. Interventions tested means of developing the upward flow of information based on perspectives of district managers, sub-district supervisors and community-level workers. GEHIP also endeavoured to improve procedures for the downward flow and utilization of policy guidelines. Field exchanges were convened for providing national, regional and district leaders with opportunities for participatory learning about GEHIP implementation innovations. This systems approach facilitated the process of augmenting the communication of evidence with practical field experience. Scientific rigor associated with the production of evidence was thereby integrated into management decision-making processes in ways that institutionalized learning at all levels. The GEHIP knowledge management system functioned as a prototype for guiding the planning of a national knowledge management strategy. A follow-up project transferred its mechanisms from the Upper East Regional Health Administration to the Policy Planning Monitoring and Evaluation Division of the Ghana Health Service in Accra.
引用
收藏
页码:420 / 427
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The implementation of community-based care: a case study
    de Witt, Marike
    EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT AND CARE, 2010, 180 (05) : 605 - 618
  • [42] Supporting New Community-Based Participatory Research Partnerships
    Teufel-Shone, Nicolette I.
    Schwartz, Anna L.
    Hardy, Lisa J.
    de Heer, Hendrik D.
    Williamson, Heather J.
    Dunn, Dorothy J.
    Polingyumptewa, Kellen
    Chief, Carmenlita
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2019, 16 (01):
  • [43] An evaluation of a community-based food supplementation for people living with HIV in Ghana: Implications for community-based interventions in Ghana Public Health
    Mensah K.A.
    Okyere P.
    Doku P.N.
    BMC Research Notes, 8 (1)
  • [44] Health care utilization among users of community-based health insurance after the implementation of subsidies to poorest households in Nouna, Burkina Faso
    Lietz, H.
    Schoeps, A.
    Savadogo, G.
    Sie, A.
    Stock, C.
    Sauerborn, R.
    Souares, A.
    TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 2015, 20 : 84 - 84
  • [45] Community-Based Mental Health Care
    Benson, Sue
    Lampe, Susan
    CREATIVE NURSING, 2006, 12 (02) : 14 - 16
  • [46] Myths of community-based health care
    Taylor, CE
    BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, 2000, 78 (06) : 861 - 861
  • [47] Supporting Latina Breast Health with Community-based Navigation
    Keith, Jennifer D.
    Kang, Nichole E.
    Bodden, MatheRose
    Miller, Christina
    Karamanian, Vanesa
    Banks, Tinesha
    JOURNAL OF CANCER EDUCATION, 2019, 34 (04) : 654 - 657
  • [48] COMMUNITY-BASED HEALTH CARE IN ACTION
    Hache, A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CIRCUMPOLAR HEALTH, 2010, 69 : 522 - 522
  • [49] Supporting Latina Breast Health with Community-based Navigation
    Jennifer D. Keith
    Nichole E. Kang
    MatheRose Bodden
    Christina Miller
    Vanesa Karamanian
    Tinesha Banks
    Journal of Cancer Education, 2019, 34 : 654 - 657
  • [50] Reflections on the Values of Community-Based Participatory Research in Supporting Mobile Health Technology Use
    Merid, Beza
    Whitfield, Candace O.
    Skolarus, Lesli E.
    CIRCULATION-CARDIOVASCULAR QUALITY AND OUTCOMES, 2020, 13 (09): : 692 - 694