Community Dialogues for ICCM

Source: Malaria Consortium

Year of Publication:

2012

Integrated community case management (ICCM) – an approach where community-based health workers are trained to identify, treat and refer children under-five with pneumonia, diarrhea and malaria – is increasingly being used across sub-Saharan Africa to supplement the gaps in basic healthcare provision. ICCM programs have been endorsed by major international organizations and donors, and many African Ministries of Health as a key strategy for reducing child mortality. This learning paper describes Malaria Consortium’s approach to and experience of engaging local communities in integrated community case management (ICCM) in three African countries.

This learning paper looks at some key barriers to the early treatment of sick children and the interventions developed to address them, with a focus on the Community Dialogue (CD) approach. Preliminary findings drawn from the early stages of implementation show that CD has been a very effective way of identifying and filling information gaps, as well as encouraging community analysis and planning.

Dialogues are chaired by community leaders and co-facilitated by CHWs. Ten simple steps are outlined to organize and lead fruitful community dialogue sessions, comprising three core phases:

Exploring the topic: questioning assumptions, filling knowledge gaps, clarifying misconceptions.
Identifying issues: reflecting on personal experiences of childhood diseases’ management and prevention.
Action planning: agreeing on a few achievable individual or collective actions to ensure prompt, high-quality medical care for young children as well as appropriate ways to prevent these diseases.

Initial feedback indicates that the CD approach is highly appreciated by community-based facilitators, community members, and health center staff. Because it is grassroots-based, reaching out to communities, it allows ‘ordinary people’ to interact and reflect on health information within their villages and not at health facilities, where such interactions usually happen. Not all community members have access to radio or a phone to participate in radio phone-in programs. Others, because of low literacy, can misinterpret posters. Participants are encouraged at CD sessions to express their views, ask questions and tell their own stories and do so freely because the session is facilitated by peers rather than professional health staff.

Community Dialogues for Healthy Children: Encouraging Communities to Talk

Source: Malaria Consortium

Year of Publication:

2012

This paper looks at some key barriers to the early treatment of sick children identified by Malaria Consortium and the interventions developed to address them, with a focus on the community dialogue (CD) approach. The potential of CD to improve health outcomes has been largely recognized by practitioners and researchers. However, examples of how this works in practice in the ICCM context are rare. This paper describes the model developed by Malaria Consortium to trigger genuine dialogue within local communities about the management of selected childhood diseases. Initial lessons from the early stages of community dialogue implementation are outlined and it is proposed that an evaluation of the experiment should be allowed to contribute to efforts to identify good practices for effective community involvement in ICCM programming.

Community Dialogues for Child Health

Source: Malaria Consortium

Year of Publication:

2015

This Learning Brief summarizes a qualitative process evaluation conducted to assess communities’ response to a community dialogue approach, after one year of implementation in rural settings of three countries (Mozamique, Uganda and Zambia), in terms of outreach, relevance and intermediate results.

The study finds that community dialogues can be a powerful approach to make health promotion activities of community-based volunteers more participatory and effective in addressing social norms around child care practices, particularly in setting new social norms for early care-seeking at community health worker point of care.

Community Dialogue for Child Health: Results from a Process Evaluation in 3 Countries

Source: Malaria Consortium

Year of Publication:

2014

This learning brief presents results from a rigorous process evaluation conducted in 3 countries, aiming at assessing if the community dialogue approach implemented was appropriate and effective in raising demand for iCCM services at community level.