Implementation and effectiveness outcomes of Community Health Advocacy Teams to improve long-lasting insecticide net distribution and use in six districts in Ghana: A one-group pre-post-test study
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Plos Global Public Health
Abstract
Malaria remains a leading cause of illness and death especially among children and pregnant women in Ghana. Despite the efforts made by the National Malaria Elimination Programme (NMEP), including distribution of Long-Lasting Insecticide Nets (LLINs) to
households through periodic Point Mass Distribution (PMD) campaigns and continuous
channels (antenatal, schools and postnatal), there is a gap between access and use of
LLINs in Ghana. An effective and functional community-based group that would seek to
improve the effectiveness of LLIN distribution before, during, after PMD Campaigns and
continuous distribution at the community level could help address this gap. This paper
assesses the implementation outcomes and short-term effectiveness of the pilot implementation of co-created community health advocacy teams (CHAT) intervention in Ghanaian
communities to plan and implement campaigns to increase LLIN use. The study employed a
one-group pre-post-study design and measured implementation outcomes (acceptability,
appropriateness, and feasibility) and effectiveness outcomes (LLIN awareness, LLIN
access, willingness to purchase LLIN, and LLIN use) among 800 community households.
The CHAT intervention was implemented for four months across six districts in the Eastern
and Volta regions of Ghana. The data were downloaded directly from REDCap and analyzed statistically (descriptive and McNemar test of association) using SPSS 22 software.
After the implementation period, the majority of respondents in all six districts indicated that
the CHAT intervention was acceptable (89.8%), appropriate (89.5%), and feasible (90%).
Also, there was a significant association between baseline and end-line assessment on all
four effectiveness outcome measures. Household members’ awareness of, access to, willingness to purchase, and use of LLINs increased significantly over the four-month period
that the CHAT intervention was implemented. The study concludes that CHAT is an acceptable, appropriate, and feasible intervention for supporting the National Malaria Programme in LLIN PMD and for engaging in Social and Behaviour Change Communication
activities through the continuous channels of distribution. Additionally, the CHAT demonstrates short-term effectiveness outcomes in terms of creating LLIN awareness, providing
access to LLIN, and encouraging Ghanaian community members to be willing to purchase
and use LLINs. Although the activities of CHAT members were largely voluntary, integration
into the existing primary health care system will make it sustainable.
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Glozah FN, Tabong PT-N, Bazant E, Asampong E, Hornuvo R, Nwameme A, et al. (2024) Implementation and effectiveness outcomes of Community Health Advocacy Teams to improve long-lasting insecticide net distribution and use in six districts in Ghana: A one-group pre post-test study. PLOS Glob Public Health 4(4): e0002123. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pgph.0002123
