‘Community health workers deserve better this year’

‘Community health workers deserve better this year’

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Frontline health workers are expected to be honoured during the World Health Organisation’s International Year of the Healthcare Worker in 2021 in recognition to their selflessness in fending off Covid-19 pandemic

However, the community health workers must be better-supported in their vital role to further  beat back the global Covid-19 pandemic on community level, according to global health technology experts, Broad Reach-Group.

According to WHO, frontline health-workers, and in particular Community Health Workers (CHWs) help educate communities, collect grassroots data and provide vital first-line health interventions in response to the Covid-19 outbreak.

They can only continue to play a vital role in the global pandemic response if they get the proper support, according to Broad-Reach Group, a global health social enterprise that uses innovation and technology to empower human action.

Broad-Reach in partnership with South African health authorities, and thanks to the support of US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR) and USAID, have provided technology-enablement, staff training and man-power during the pandemic.

“Disease starts in our communities and the solutions are also there. Our CHWs enable our vulnerable rural and urban communities to take care of their own health and assist with early infection detection and speedy referral to nearby health facilities.

“Working in communities during a public health crisis, you need buy-in and participation, and CHWs are vital in achieving that. We can’t take on this pandemic without our CHWs. In fact, we need to train more local people to do this kind of work in vulnerable communities,” says public health physician and Broad-Reach epidemiologist, Dr Lerato Pitso.

During the pandemic, the Broad-Reach Group was particularly active in South Africa, where an estimated 60,000 public sector CHWs have put their lives on the line to work in their communities during the pandemic to help limit infections as part of the USAID APACE award.

Broad-Reach assisted the Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal provincial health departments to deploy an army of trained CHWs armed with the Vantage cloud-based screening app into rural and urban communities during the pandemic to perform more than 3.2 million Covid-19 screenings.

“All health workers are important, but CHWs particularly so, because they work on the frontlines and often receive the least amount of attention, education, capabilities-building and remuneration – yet in the global pandemic we put so much pressure on them to go actively seek out those people who’ve been infected. They carry a burden like a mother, because they go out there and look after their communities, even when it is hard. They are the essence of where fighting disease begins, at grassroots level,” says Ilona Smart, Client Director at Vantage Health Technologies – part of Broad-Reach Group.

Smart said many CHWs had to be redirected from TB, HIV and other serious conditions in 2020 towards COVID-19, which had become the greatest public health crisis of the year.

These field workers had to be trained to use new processes and technologies in record time, including the Vantage application, a cloud-based AI platform that was used by CHW for real-time screening and contact tracing.

This data consolidated and available instantly for provincial leadership to make crucial resource allocation and care decisions as the pandemic evolves. Vantage also connected to the national Covid command centre.

In his address to the nation in mid-December, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said more than 38,000 health-workers in the public sector had tested positive for Coronavirus. Of these, nearly 5,000 were admitted to hospital and 391 died. These numbers have spiked further during the second wave.

“As a nation, we owe so much to these brave and dedicated people and to their families, for without them, we would not have come this far,” Ramaphosa said.

At Broad-Reach, over 240 of its healthcare workers tested positive and one colleague was lost to the virus.

Smart said exhaustion amongst CHWs and other frontline workers was a major concern.

“Before the pandemic, the public health workers we trained and supported worked mostly with TB and HIV patients and their caseload was about two households a day. Now these same CHWs serve 10 households a day and survey each member of each household with a questionnaire of 33 questions to determine if they are presumed Covid cases or Persons Under Investigation, as we say. Special measures were put in place to recognise their challenges and support our CHWs.”

Dr Pitso said it was critical to realise that 70 per cent of healthcare workers globally are women, who also often do non-paid housework and are vulnerable in many ways. “Yet, they serve all mankind. Let’s show some compassion and do our part to keep them safe.”

“The grave shortage of healthcare workers is a global problem, even more so in Africa with existing limited resources. South Africa also has a chronic problem of shortage of CHWs and uneven distribution across provinces, yet we rely on them to shield the rest of the health system from being overburdened,” said Dr Pitso.

Looking at the ideal ratio of health workers to population, the Sustainable Development Goal index threshold is 4.45 doctors, nurses and midwives per 1,000 population, yet in many areas this number is seldom reached.

“For us to meet the required standards for Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2030 we need to have adequate human resources for health with the right skills mix. Unfortunately, our health system is overwhelmed with the current increase in patients, says Pitso.

He adds, “Healthcare workers are overworked and fatigued. Mental health should be given a priority and healthcare workers should be supported and provided with self-care training and debriefing sessions to equip them to deal with the increasing demands in healthcare.”

  • A Tell report
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