Community health workers to reduce unmet surgical needs in an urban slum in India: an implementation study

Author:

Vora Kranti1,Salvi Falguni1,Saiyed Shahin1,Desai Chinmayi2,Joshi Rajendra2,Buch Keyur3,Mavalankar Dileep1,Jindal Rahul M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Indian Institute of Public Health , Gandhinagar, Gujarat 382042 , India

2. SAATH Charitable Trust , Ahmedabad, Gujarat 380015 , India

3. EPIC Hospital , Ahmedabad 380060 , India

Abstract

Abstract Background The Surgical Accredited & Trained Healthcare Initiative (SATHI) project demonstrates how community healthcare workers (CHWs) with merely 8 y of formal schooling and training for a short period can reduce unmet surgical needs. Methods A pilot study was carried out in the slums of a metropolitan city in India to know the effectiveness of a SATHI in reducing the burden of unmet surgical needs. In total, 12 730 people from 3000 households were included in the study for a duration of 6 months. Results We found 10% surgical needs (n=293) out of which 57% had unmet surgical needs. Out of total surgical needs, about half of the needs were cataract and abdominal, followed by extremities and chest conditions. SATHIs were able to convert 99 patients (60%) from unmet to met needs, who underwent surgery/treatment. The conversion from unmet to met among all surgery needs was highest for abdominal conditions (29%) followed by cataracts (17%). Conclusions SATHIs with short training can reduce the burden of unmet surgical needs. SATHIs were able to convert a significant proportion of unmet to met needs by trust building, facilitating access to healthcare and ensuring post-operative adherence. Scaling up could help in the achievement of equitable healthcare across India.

Funder

USIEF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine,Health (social science)

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