Kim Kyounghae, Choi Janet S, Choi Eunsuk, Nieman Carrie L, Joo Jin Hui, Lin Frank R, Gitlin Laura N, Han Hae-Ra
Kyounghae Kim and Hae-Ra Han are with The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD. Janet S. Choi, Carrie L. Nieman, and Frank R. Lin are with Center on Aging and Health, The Johns Hopkins University. Eunsuk Choi is with College of Nursing and Research Institute of Nursing Science, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, South Korea. Carrie L. Nieman and Jin Hui Joo are with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Laura N. Gitlin is with Center for Innovative Care in Aging, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing and Medicine. Hae-Ra Han is also with Center for Cardiovascular and Chronic Care, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing.
Am J Public Health. 2016 Apr;106(4):e3-e28. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2015.302987. Epub 2016 Feb 18.
Community-based health workers (CBHWs) are frontline public health workers who are trusted members of the community they serve. Recently, considerable attention has been drawn to CBHWs in promoting healthy behaviors and health outcomes among vulnerable populations who often face health inequities.
We performed a systematic review to synthesize evidence concerning the types of CBHW interventions, the qualification and characteristics of CBHWs, and patient outcomes and cost-effectiveness of such interventions in vulnerable populations with chronic, noncommunicable conditions.
We undertook 4 electronic database searches-PubMed, EMBASE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and Cochrane-and hand searched reference collections to identify randomized controlled trials published in English before August 2014.
We screened a total of 934 unique citations initially for titles and abstracts. Two reviewers then independently evaluated 166 full-text articles that were passed onto review processes. Sixty-one studies and 6 companion articles (e.g., cost-effectiveness analysis) met eligibility criteria for inclusion.
Four trained research assistants extracted data by using a standardized data extraction form developed by the authors. Subsequently, an independent research assistant reviewed extracted data to check accuracy. Discrepancies were resolved through discussions among the study team members. Each study was evaluated for its quality by 2 research assistants who extracted relevant study information. Interrater agreement rates ranged from 61% to 91% (average 86%). Any discrepancies in terms of quality rating were resolved through team discussions.
All but 4 studies were conducted in the United States. The 2 most common areas for CBHW interventions were cancer prevention (n = 30) and cardiovascular disease risk reduction (n = 26). The roles assumed by CBHWs included health education (n = 48), counseling (n = 36), navigation assistance (n = 21), case management (n = 4), social services (n = 7), and social support (n = 18). Fifty-three studies provided information regarding CBHW training, yet CBHW competency evaluation (n = 9) and supervision procedures (n = 24) were largely underreported. The length and duration of CBHW training ranged from 4 hours to 240 hours with an average of 41.3 hours (median: 16.5 hours) in 24 studies that reported length of training. Eight studies reported the frequency of supervision, which ranged from weekly to monthly. There was a trend toward improvements in cancer prevention (n = 21) and cardiovascular risk reduction (n = 16). Eight articles documented cost analyses and found that integrating CBHWs into the health care delivery system was associated with cost-effective and sustainable care.
Interventions by CBHWs appear to be effective when compared with alternatives and also cost-effective for certain health conditions, particularly when partnering with low-income, underserved, and racial and ethnic minority communities. Future research is warranted to fully incorporate CBHWs into the health care system to promote noncommunicable health outcomes among vulnerable populations.
社区卫生工作者是一线公共卫生工作者,是他们所服务社区中值得信赖的成员。最近,社区卫生工作者在促进经常面临健康不平等的弱势群体的健康行为和健康结果方面受到了相当大的关注。
我们进行了一项系统综述,以综合有关社区卫生工作者干预类型、社区卫生工作者的资质和特征,以及此类干预在患有慢性非传染性疾病的弱势群体中的患者结局和成本效益的证据。
我们进行了4次电子数据库检索——PubMed、EMBASE、护理学与健康相关学科累积索引和Cochrane——并手工检索参考文献集,以识别2014年8月之前发表的英文随机对照试验。
我们最初共筛选了934条独特的标题和摘要引文。然后,两名评审员独立评估了进入评审流程的166篇全文文章。61项研究和6篇配套文章(如成本效益分析)符合纳入标准。
四名经过培训的研究助理使用作者开发的标准化数据提取表提取数据。随后,一名独立的研究助理审查提取的数据以检查准确性。差异通过研究团队成员之间的讨论解决。每项研究由两名提取相关研究信息的研究助理评估其质量。评分者间的一致率在61%至91%之间(平均86%)。质量评级方面的任何差异通过团队讨论解决。
除4项研究外,所有研究均在美国进行。社区卫生工作者干预的两个最常见领域是癌症预防(n = 30)和心血管疾病风险降低(n = 26)。社区卫生工作者承担的角色包括健康教育(n = 48)、咨询(n = 36)、导航协助(n = 2)、病例管理(n = 4)、社会服务(n = 7)和社会支持(n = 18)。53项研究提供了有关社区卫生工作者培训的信息,但社区卫生工作者能力评估(n = 9)和监督程序(n = 24)的报告大多不足。在24项报告培训时长的研究中,社区卫生工作者培训的时长从4小时到240小时不等,平均为41.3小时(中位数:16.5小时)。8项研究报告了监督频率,范围从每周到每月。在癌症预防(n = 21)和心血管疾病风险降低(n = 16)方面有改善趋势。八篇文章记录了成本分析,发现将社区卫生工作者纳入医疗服务提供系统与具有成本效益和可持续的护理相关。
与其他替代方案相比,社区卫生工作者的干预似乎是有效的,并且对于某些健康状况也是具有成本效益的,特别是在与低收入、服务不足以及种族和少数民族社区合作时。未来有必要进行研究,以将社区卫生工作者充分纳入医疗保健系统,以促进弱势群体的非传染性健康结果。