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Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper. / Kisangala, Ephraim; Mbivnjo, Etheldreda Leinyuy; Okeah, Bernard et al.
In: South Eastern European Journal of Public Health, Vol. 18, No. Special Issue 2, 17.04.2021.

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HarvardHarvard

Kisangala, E, Mbivnjo, EL, Okeah, B & Khan, MA 2021, 'Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper', South Eastern European Journal of Public Health, vol. 18, no. Special Issue 2. https://doi.org/10.11576/seejph-4353

APA

Kisangala, E., Mbivnjo, E. L., Okeah, B., & Khan, M. A. (2021). Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper. South Eastern European Journal of Public Health, 18(Special Issue 2). https://doi.org/10.11576/seejph-4353

CBE

Kisangala E, Mbivnjo EL, Okeah B, Khan MA. 2021. Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper. South Eastern European Journal of Public Health. 18(Special Issue 2). https://doi.org/10.11576/seejph-4353

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Kisangala E, Mbivnjo EL, Okeah B, Khan MA. Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper. South Eastern European Journal of Public Health. 2021 Apr 17;18(Special Issue 2). doi: https://doi.org/10.11576/seejph-4353

Author

Kisangala, Ephraim ; Mbivnjo, Etheldreda Leinyuy ; Okeah, Bernard et al. / Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper. In: South Eastern European Journal of Public Health. 2021 ; Vol. 18, No. Special Issue 2.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Community and Informal Care Providers at the Heart of Universal Health Coverage in sub-Saharan Africa: A Position Paper

AU - Kisangala, Ephraim

AU - Mbivnjo, Etheldreda Leinyuy

AU - Okeah, Bernard

AU - Khan, Mohammed Azhar

PY - 2021/4/17

Y1 - 2021/4/17

N2 - Globally, increased demand on often scarce healthcare resources and those challenges incumbent in responding to the coexistence of infectious and non-communicable diseases warrant the need to address persistent health inequities. Understanding the complex intersectionality of vulnerability and reaching those in most critical need of healthcare lies at the heart of fostering and sustaining resilient healthcare systems. Harnessing the long-recognised value of Community and Informal Care Providers (CICPs) is instrumental to Universal Health Coverage (UHC). The present COVID-19 context serves as a poignant example of where access to formal healthcare services by many has become increasingly difficult. Here, the value of informal or volunteer-led health services has been a lifeline for many. For several decades, formal reportage has evidenced the established role of CICPs, particularly across Sub-Saharan Africa with quantifiable efficacy across a number of domains, such as, maternal and child health, neglected tropical disease prevention, tuberculosis care and malaria control. CICPs have been sustainable and effective as a conduit between the formal and informal health sectors, and between health facilities and the remotest of communities. Maximising the function of CICPs relies on socio-culturally, geographically sensitive, and bespoke support; psychosocial, practical, and logistical capacitation coupled with situationally and culturally appropriate monitoring and evaluation. The Astana Declaration highlights the centrality of building on existing knowledge, insight and resource. We therefore argue that CICPs are indispensable in Africa’s move towards UHC, and hold promise for acceptable, accessible, affordable, and quality healthcare to everyone who needs to get, be and stay healthy.

AB - Globally, increased demand on often scarce healthcare resources and those challenges incumbent in responding to the coexistence of infectious and non-communicable diseases warrant the need to address persistent health inequities. Understanding the complex intersectionality of vulnerability and reaching those in most critical need of healthcare lies at the heart of fostering and sustaining resilient healthcare systems. Harnessing the long-recognised value of Community and Informal Care Providers (CICPs) is instrumental to Universal Health Coverage (UHC). The present COVID-19 context serves as a poignant example of where access to formal healthcare services by many has become increasingly difficult. Here, the value of informal or volunteer-led health services has been a lifeline for many. For several decades, formal reportage has evidenced the established role of CICPs, particularly across Sub-Saharan Africa with quantifiable efficacy across a number of domains, such as, maternal and child health, neglected tropical disease prevention, tuberculosis care and malaria control. CICPs have been sustainable and effective as a conduit between the formal and informal health sectors, and between health facilities and the remotest of communities. Maximising the function of CICPs relies on socio-culturally, geographically sensitive, and bespoke support; psychosocial, practical, and logistical capacitation coupled with situationally and culturally appropriate monitoring and evaluation. The Astana Declaration highlights the centrality of building on existing knowledge, insight and resource. We therefore argue that CICPs are indispensable in Africa’s move towards UHC, and hold promise for acceptable, accessible, affordable, and quality healthcare to everyone who needs to get, be and stay healthy.

KW - Community Health Workers

KW - informal caregivers

KW - Universal Health Coverage

KW - sub-Saharan Africa

U2 - https://doi.org/10.11576/seejph-4353

DO - https://doi.org/10.11576/seejph-4353

M3 - Conference article

VL - 18

JO - South Eastern European Journal of Public Health

JF - South Eastern European Journal of Public Health

SN - 2197-5248

IS - Special Issue 2

ER -