The female community health volunteer programme in Nepal: Decision makers' perceptions of volunteerism, payment and other incentives

被引:174
作者
Glenton, Claire [1 ]
Scheel, Inger B. [1 ]
Pradhan, Sabina [2 ]
Lewin, Simon [3 ]
Hodgins, Stephen [2 ]
Shrestha, Vijaya
机构
[1] SINTEF Soc & Technol, Dept Global Hlth & Welf, N-0314 Oslo, Norway
[2] Nepal Family Hlth Program, Kathmandu, Nepal
[3] MRC, Cape Town, South Africa
关键词
Nepal; Community health workers; Incentives; Volunteerism; Women; SURVIVAL; WORKERS; SYSTEM; CARE;
D O I
10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.02.034
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The Female Community Health Volunteer (FCHV) Programme in Nepal has existed since the late 1980s and includes almost 50,000 volunteers. Although volunteer programmes are widely thought to be characterised by high attrition levels, the FCHV Programme loses fewer than 5% of its volunteers annually. The degree to which decision makers understand community health worker motivations and match these with appropriate incentives is likely to influence programme sustainability. The purpose of this study was to explore the views of stakeholders who have participated in the design and implementation of the Female Community Health Volunteer regarding Volunteer motivation and appropriate incentives, and to compare these views with the views and expectations of Volunteers. Semi-structured interviews were carried out in 2009 with 19 purposively selected non-Volunteer stakeholders, including policy makers and programme managers. Results were compared with data from previous studies of Female Community Health Volunteers and from interviews with four Volunteers and two Volunteer activists. Stakeholders saw Volunteers as motivated primarily by social respect, religious and moral duty. The freedom to deliver services at their leisure was seen as central to the volunteer concept. While stakeholders also saw the need for extrinsic incentives such as micro-credit, regular wages were regarded not only as financially unfeasible, but as a potential threat to the Volunteers' social respect, and thereby to their motivation. These views were reflected in interviews with and previous studies of Female Community Health Volunteers, and appear to be influenced by a tradition of volunteering as moral behaviour, a lack of respect for paid government workers, and the Programme's community embeddedness. Our study suggests that it may not be useful to promote a generic range of incentives, such as wages, to improve community health worker programme sustainability. Instead, programmes should ensure that the context-specific expectations of community health workers, programme managers, and policy makers are in alignment if low attrition and high performance are to be achieved. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1920 / 1927
页数:8
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]  
Abbatt F., 2005, SCALING HLTH ED WORK
[2]   VOICES FROM THE INSIDE - MANAGING DISTRICT HEALTH-SERVICES IN NEPAL [J].
AITKEN, JM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT, 1994, 9 (04) :309-340
[3]   Doctors for the poor in urban Nepal [J].
Allaby, MAK .
TROPICAL DOCTOR, 2003, 33 (02) :83-85
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2007, Nepal Demographic and Health Survey 2006
[5]  
[Anonymous], SCAL SAV LIV
[6]  
Baker B., 2007, Systems support for task shifting to community health workers
[7]  
*BASICS 2, 2004, NEP CHILD SURV CAS S
[8]  
Bhattacharyya K., 2001, Community Health Worker Incentives andn Disincentives: How They Affect Motivation, Retention and Sustainability
[9]  
Chaulagai C N, 1993, World Health Forum, V14, P16
[10]  
Chevalier C, 1993, World Health Forum, V14, P258