Community Participation in Primary Healthcare in the South Sudan Boma Health Initiative: A Document Analysis

Publish Year: 1401
نوع سند: مقاله ژورنالی
زبان: English
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JR_HPM-11-12_009

تاریخ نمایه سازی: 17 مرداد 1403

Abstract:

Background  Community participation is central to primary healthcare, yet there is little evidence of how this works in conflict settings. In ۲۰۱۶, South Sudan’s Ministry of Health launched the Boma Health Initiative (BHI) to improve primary care services through community participation.Methods  We conducted a document analysis to examine how well the BHI policy addressed community participation in its policy formulation. We reviewed other policy documents and published literature to provide background context and supplementary data. We used a deductive thematic analysis that followed Rifkin and colleagues’ community participation framework to assess the BHI policy.Results  The BHI planners included inputs from communities without details on how the needs assessment was conducted at the community level, what needs were considered, and from which community. The intended role of communities was to implement the policy under local leadership. There was no information on how the Initiative might strengthen or expand local women’s leadership. Official documents did not contemplate local power relations or address gender imbalance. The policy approached households as consumers of health services.Conclusion  Although the BHI advocated community participation to generate awareness, increase acceptability, access to services and ownership, the policy document did not include community participation during policy cycle.

Authors

Loubna Belaid

CIET-PRAM (Participatory Research at McGill), Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

Iván Sarmiento

CIET-PRAM (Participatory Research at McGill), Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

Alexander Dimiti

Department of Reproductive Health, Ministry of Health, Juba, South Sudan

Neil Andersson

CIET-PRAM (Participatory Research at McGill), Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada