Yibeltal Kiflie Alemayehu, Girmay Medhin, Alula M Teklu
{"title":"埃塞俄比亚卫生推广计划国家评估:研究协议和主要成果。","authors":"Yibeltal Kiflie Alemayehu, Girmay Medhin, Alula M Teklu","doi":"10.4314/ejhs.v33i1.2S","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>The Health Extension Program (HEP) was introduced in 2003 to extend primary health care services by institutionalizing the former volunteer-based village health services. However, this program is not comprehensively evaluated.</p><p><strong>Materials and methods: </strong>The 2019 comprehensive national assessment of HEP involved (1) assessment through quantitative and qualitative primary data, (2) a thorough systematic review of the HEP literature, and (3) a synthesis of evidence from the two sources. The assessment included household survey(n=7122), a survey of health extension workers (HEWs) (n=584)_, and an assessment of health posts (HPs)(n=343) and their supervising health centers (HCs)(n=179) from 62 randomly selected woredas. As part of the comprehensive assessment.</p><p><strong>Output and results: </strong>The outputs were (a) full and abridged reports, (b) 40 posters, (c) seven published, three under review scientific papers and (d) seven papers in this special issue. During the one-year period preceding the study, 54.8% of women, 32.1% of men, and 21.9% of female youths had at least a one-time interaction with HEWs. HPs and HEWs were universally available. There were critical gaps in the skills and motivation of HEWs and fulfillment of HP standards: 57.3% of HEWs were certified, average satisfaction score of HEWs was 48.6%, and 5.4% of HPs fulfilled equipment standards.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The findings informed policy and program decisions of the Ministry of Health, including the design of the HEP Optimization Roadmap 2020-2035 and the development Health Sector Transformation Plan II. It is also shared with global community through published papers.</p>","PeriodicalId":12003,"journal":{"name":"Ethiopian Journal of Health Sciences","volume":"33 Spec Iss 1","pages":"3-14"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10866293/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"National Assessment of the Health Extension Program in Ethiopia: Study Protocol and Key Outputs.\",\"authors\":\"Yibeltal Kiflie Alemayehu, Girmay Medhin, Alula M Teklu\",\"doi\":\"10.4314/ejhs.v33i1.2S\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>The Health Extension Program (HEP) was introduced in 2003 to extend primary health care services by institutionalizing the former volunteer-based village health services. However, this program is not comprehensively evaluated.</p><p><strong>Materials and methods: </strong>The 2019 comprehensive national assessment of HEP involved (1) assessment through quantitative and qualitative primary data, (2) a thorough systematic review of the HEP literature, and (3) a synthesis of evidence from the two sources. The assessment included household survey(n=7122), a survey of health extension workers (HEWs) (n=584)_, and an assessment of health posts (HPs)(n=343) and their supervising health centers (HCs)(n=179) from 62 randomly selected woredas. As part of the comprehensive assessment.</p><p><strong>Output and results: </strong>The outputs were (a) full and abridged reports, (b) 40 posters, (c) seven published, three under review scientific papers and (d) seven papers in this special issue. During the one-year period preceding the study, 54.8% of women, 32.1% of men, and 21.9% of female youths had at least a one-time interaction with HEWs. HPs and HEWs were universally available. There were critical gaps in the skills and motivation of HEWs and fulfillment of HP standards: 57.3% of HEWs were certified, average satisfaction score of HEWs was 48.6%, and 5.4% of HPs fulfilled equipment standards.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>The findings informed policy and program decisions of the Ministry of Health, including the design of the HEP Optimization Roadmap 2020-2035 and the development Health Sector Transformation Plan II. 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National Assessment of the Health Extension Program in Ethiopia: Study Protocol and Key Outputs.
Background: The Health Extension Program (HEP) was introduced in 2003 to extend primary health care services by institutionalizing the former volunteer-based village health services. However, this program is not comprehensively evaluated.
Materials and methods: The 2019 comprehensive national assessment of HEP involved (1) assessment through quantitative and qualitative primary data, (2) a thorough systematic review of the HEP literature, and (3) a synthesis of evidence from the two sources. The assessment included household survey(n=7122), a survey of health extension workers (HEWs) (n=584)_, and an assessment of health posts (HPs)(n=343) and their supervising health centers (HCs)(n=179) from 62 randomly selected woredas. As part of the comprehensive assessment.
Output and results: The outputs were (a) full and abridged reports, (b) 40 posters, (c) seven published, three under review scientific papers and (d) seven papers in this special issue. During the one-year period preceding the study, 54.8% of women, 32.1% of men, and 21.9% of female youths had at least a one-time interaction with HEWs. HPs and HEWs were universally available. There were critical gaps in the skills and motivation of HEWs and fulfillment of HP standards: 57.3% of HEWs were certified, average satisfaction score of HEWs was 48.6%, and 5.4% of HPs fulfilled equipment standards.
Conclusions: The findings informed policy and program decisions of the Ministry of Health, including the design of the HEP Optimization Roadmap 2020-2035 and the development Health Sector Transformation Plan II. It is also shared with global community through published papers.
期刊介绍:
Ethiopian Journal of Health Sciences is a general health science journal addressing clinical medicine, public health and biomedical sciences. Rarely, it covers veterinary medicine