Volunteers

Communication Action Groups: Promoting Broader Discussion of Reproductive Health

In 1996, the REWARD Project identified a need for effective interventions to increase women’s communication about reproductive health among themselves and with their husbands. Project staff formed women’s groups, called Communication Action Groups (CAGs), in three rural districts. The project provides group leaders with training on communication, leadership, group dynamics, condom use, condom negotiating skills, and HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections (STIs). This study was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of the CAG program so that achievements and problems could be identified and program activities strengthened.

Contribution of International Health Volunteers to the Health Workforce in Sub-Saharan Africa

In this paper, we aim to quantify the contribution of international health volunteers (IHVs) to the health workforce in sub-Saharan Africa and to explore the perceptions of health service managers regarding these volunteers. [from abstract]

Effect of Community Nurses and Health Volunteers on Child Mortality: the Navrongo Community Health and Family Planning Project

This report presents the child mortality impact of a trial of primary healthcare service delivery strategies in rural Ghana. After adjustment for sociodemographic factors, underfive mortality in areas with village-based community-nurse services fell by 16 percent during the five years of program implementation compared with mortality before the intervention. [from abstract]

Ghana START Process Evaluation Report

This document evaluates the Support and Treatment for Antiretroviral Therapy project (START) program, a joint initiative of Family Health International (FHI) and the Government of Ghana, to integrate antiretroviral therapy into comprehensive care for people living with HIV/AIDS in Ghana. START helped establish voluntary counseling and testing centers, prevention of mother-to-child transmission activities and clinical care services. Key components of the START program include home-based care (HBC), referral networks and linkages to such existing services as spiritual and social support, and support for orphans and other vulnerable children (OVC).

Healers Abroad: Americans Responding to the Human Resource Crisis in HIV/AIDS

This report explores potential strategies for mobilizing U.S. health personnel and technical experts to assist in the battle against HIV/AIDS in 15 African, Caribbean, and Southeast Asian countries highly affected by the disease. Commissioned by the U.S. Department of State as part of a historic global health initiative—the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)—the report presents the results of a study conducted by the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on the Options for Overseas Placement of U.S. Health Professionals. [Description from author]

Note: Online book

Participatory Community Planning for Child Health: Implementation Guidelines

The goal of the community assessment described here is for health staff and communities to jointly identify and prioritize health problems and then develop plans to solve them. This approach collects and uses information on maternal and child health behaviors and is designed for district and subdistrict program planners and health staff. These implementation guidelines include a description of the overall design, the procedures, and suggestions for training. Assessment forms are included within each section. [abstract]

Village Health Team Strategy is a Most Innovative Community Practice Award Winner: the Experience of a Village Volunteer Programme in Yumbe District, Uganda

In Yumbe District of north-western Uganda, Village Health Teams (VHT) have been established in line with the national strategy for community involvement in health. The Yumbe VHT programme has won an award for innovative support to strengthening decentralisation. This paper reviews aspects of the programme outlining its successes and challenges.

Volunteers Can Contribute to Health Care

Developing countries have lost thousands of skilled health care workers to developed countries. One way to redress this imbalance is to develop innovative methods for training and developing the skills of health care staff in developing countries. Volunteers from developed countries can help to train and motivate health care workers who remain. They are also important in emergencies and in filling vacant posts. [author’s description]

What Motivates Lay Volunteers in High Burden but Resource-Limited Tuberculosis Control Programmes? Perceptions from the Northern Cape province, South Africa

This study explored the factors that motivate lay volunteers to join tuberculosis (TB) control programmes in high burden but resource-limited settings.