Success in vaccination programming through community health workers: a qualitative analysis of interviews and focus group discussions from Nepal, Senegal and Zambia.
Emily A OgutuAnna S EllisKyra A HesterKatie RodriguezZoe SakasChandni JaishwalChenmua YangSameer DixitAnindya Sekhar BoseMoussa SarrWilliam KilembeRobert BednarczykMatthew C FreemanPublished in: BMJ open (2024)
Improvements in immunisation coverage was facilitated by community health worker organisation, motivation and trust. With the continued projection of health worker shortages, especially in low-income countries, community health workers bridged the equity gap in access to vaccination services by enabling wider reach to underserved populations. Although improvements in vaccination programming were seen in all three countries-including government commitment to addressing human resource deficits, training and remuneration; workload, inconsistency in compensation, training duration and scope, and supervision remain major challenges to immunisation programming. Health decision-makers should consider organisation, motivation and trust of community health workers to improve the implementation of immunisation programming.
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