Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract Background Choosing who should be recruited as a community health worker (CHW) is an important task, for their future performance partly depends on their ability to learn the required knowledge and skills, and their personal attributes. Developing a fair and effective selection process for...

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Main Authors: Celia Brown, Richard Lilford, Frances Griffiths, Prince Oppong-Darko, Myness Ndambo, Marion Okoh-Owusu, Emily Wroe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:Human Resources for Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-019-0412-2
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spelling doaj-8887df9ae4684550825af240c92899362020-11-25T04:00:17ZengBMCHuman Resources for Health1478-44912019-10-0117111010.1186/s12960-019-0412-2Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan AfricaCelia Brown0Richard Lilford1Frances Griffiths2Prince Oppong-Darko3Myness Ndambo4Marion Okoh-Owusu5Emily Wroe6Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical SchoolDivision of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical SchoolDivision of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical SchoolGhana Health ServicePartners In HealthGhana Health ServicePartners In HealthAbstract Background Choosing who should be recruited as a community health worker (CHW) is an important task, for their future performance partly depends on their ability to learn the required knowledge and skills, and their personal attributes. Developing a fair and effective selection process for CHWs is a challenging task, and reports of attempts to do so are rare. This paper describes a five-stage process of development and initial testing of a CHW selection process in two CHW programmes, one in Malawi and one in Ghana, highlighting the lessons learned at each stage and offering recommendations to other CHW programme providers seeking to develop their own selection processes. Case presentation The five stages of selection process development were as follows: (1) review an existing selection process, (2) conduct a job analysis, (3) elicit stakeholder opinions, (4) co-design the selection process and (5) test the selection process. Good practice in selection process development from the human resource literature and the principles of co-design were considered throughout. Validity, reliability, fairness, acceptability and feasibility—the determinants of selection process utility—were considered as appropriate during stages 1 to 4 and used to guide the testing in stage 5. The selection methods used by each local team were a written test and a short interview. Conclusions Working with stakeholders, including CHWs, helped to ensure the acceptability of the selection processes developed. Expectations of intensiveness—in particular the number of interviewers—needed to be managed as resources for selection are limited, and CHWs reported that any form of interview may be stressful. Testing highlighted the importance of piloting with CHWs to ensure clarity of wording of questions, interviewer training to maximise inter-rater reliability and the provision of guidance to applicants in advance of any selection events. Trade-offs between the different components of selection process utility are also likely to be required. Further refinements and evaluation of predictive validity (i.e. a sixth stage of development) would be recommended before roll-out.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-019-0412-2Community health workersSelectionRecruitmentPerformance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Celia Brown
Richard Lilford
Frances Griffiths
Prince Oppong-Darko
Myness Ndambo
Marion Okoh-Owusu
Emily Wroe
spellingShingle Celia Brown
Richard Lilford
Frances Griffiths
Prince Oppong-Darko
Myness Ndambo
Marion Okoh-Owusu
Emily Wroe
Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa
Human Resources for Health
Community health workers
Selection
Recruitment
Performance
author_facet Celia Brown
Richard Lilford
Frances Griffiths
Prince Oppong-Darko
Myness Ndambo
Marion Okoh-Owusu
Emily Wroe
author_sort Celia Brown
title Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa
title_short Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa
title_full Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa
title_fullStr Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-Saharan Africa
title_sort case study of a method of development of a selection process for community health workers in sub-saharan africa
publisher BMC
series Human Resources for Health
issn 1478-4491
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Choosing who should be recruited as a community health worker (CHW) is an important task, for their future performance partly depends on their ability to learn the required knowledge and skills, and their personal attributes. Developing a fair and effective selection process for CHWs is a challenging task, and reports of attempts to do so are rare. This paper describes a five-stage process of development and initial testing of a CHW selection process in two CHW programmes, one in Malawi and one in Ghana, highlighting the lessons learned at each stage and offering recommendations to other CHW programme providers seeking to develop their own selection processes. Case presentation The five stages of selection process development were as follows: (1) review an existing selection process, (2) conduct a job analysis, (3) elicit stakeholder opinions, (4) co-design the selection process and (5) test the selection process. Good practice in selection process development from the human resource literature and the principles of co-design were considered throughout. Validity, reliability, fairness, acceptability and feasibility—the determinants of selection process utility—were considered as appropriate during stages 1 to 4 and used to guide the testing in stage 5. The selection methods used by each local team were a written test and a short interview. Conclusions Working with stakeholders, including CHWs, helped to ensure the acceptability of the selection processes developed. Expectations of intensiveness—in particular the number of interviewers—needed to be managed as resources for selection are limited, and CHWs reported that any form of interview may be stressful. Testing highlighted the importance of piloting with CHWs to ensure clarity of wording of questions, interviewer training to maximise inter-rater reliability and the provision of guidance to applicants in advance of any selection events. Trade-offs between the different components of selection process utility are also likely to be required. Further refinements and evaluation of predictive validity (i.e. a sixth stage of development) would be recommended before roll-out.
topic Community health workers
Selection
Recruitment
Performance
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-019-0412-2
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