detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:7325...

Tema
Research Article
Autor
Stansert Katzen, Linnea Tomlinson, Mark Christodoulou, Joan Laurenzi, Christina le Roux, Ingrid Baker, Venetia Mbewu, Nokwanele le Roux, Karl W. Rotheram Borus, Mary Jane
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Categoría

BMC Health Services Research

Año

2020

fecha de cotización

5/12/2023

Palabras clave
cohort child care sc received study birth home workers south mothers visits rural health
Métrico

Resumen

BACKGROUND: More than 50% of Africa’s population lives in rural areas, which have few professional health workers.

South Africa has adopted task shifting health care to Community Health Workers (CHWs) to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, but little is known about CHWs’ efficacy in rural areas.

METHODS: In this longitudinal prospective cohort study, almost all mothers giving birth (N = 470) in the Zithulele Hospital catchment area of the OR Tambo District were recruited and repeatedly assessed for 2 years after birth with 84.7–96% follow-up rates.

During the cohort assessment we found that some mothers had received standard antenatal and HIV care (SC) (n = 313 mothers), while others had received SC, supplemented with home-visiting by CHWs before and after birth (HV) (n = 157 mothers, 37 CHWs).

These visits were unrelated to the cohort study.

Multiple linear and logistic regressions evaluated maternal comorbidities, maternal caretaking, and child development outcomes over time.

RESULTS: Compared to mothers receiving SC, mothers who also received home visits by CHWs were more likely to attend the recommended four antenatal care visits, to exclusively breastfeed at 3 months, and were less likely to consult traditional healers at 3 months.

Mothers in both groups were equally likely to secure the child grant, and infant growth and achievement of developmental milestones were similar over the first 2 years of life.

CONCLUSION: CHW home visits resulted in better maternal caretaking, but did not have direct benefits for infants in the domains assessed.

The South African Government is planning broad implementation of CHW programmes, and this study examines a comprehensive, home-visiting model in a rural region.

Stansert Katzen, Linnea,Tomlinson, Mark,Christodoulou, Joan,Laurenzi, Christina,le Roux, Ingrid,Baker, Venetia,Mbewu, Nokwanele,le Roux, Karl W.,Rotheram Borus, Mary Jane, 2020, Home visits by community health workers in rural South Africa have a limited, but important impact on maternal and child health in the first two years of life, BioMed Central

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