2013
DOI: 10.9745/ghsp-d-12-00012
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Lessons learned from scaling up a community-based health program in the Upper East Region of northern Ghana

Abstract: The original CHPS model deployed nurses to the community and engaged local leaders, reducing child mortality and fertility substantially. Key scaling-up lessons: (1) place nurses in home districts but not home villages, (2) adapt uniquely to each district, (3) mobilize local resources, (4) develop a shared project vision, and (5) conduct “exchanges” so that staff who are initiating operations can observe the model working in another setting, pilot the approach locally, and expand based on lessons learned.

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Cited by 102 publications
(116 citation statements)
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“…In addition, implemented interventions to tackle childhood mortality should be reformed based on the recurrent defects identified in policy formulation and implementation to accelerate attainment of SDG 3.2 (9, 31, 34). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, implemented interventions to tackle childhood mortality should be reformed based on the recurrent defects identified in policy formulation and implementation to accelerate attainment of SDG 3.2 (9, 31, 34). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequent investigations suggest, however, that the health and demographic impact of scaled up operations contrast with the original Navrongo results (Awoonor-Williams et al, 2013;Awoonor-Williams, VaughanSmith, & Phillips, 2010;Binka et al, 2007;Phillips et al, 2006). Although the Project's child mortality effects have been sustained and extended a decade after experimental operations ended, new evidence shows that the effects of the scaled-up programme are now less pronounced .…”
mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Scale-up began in the original comparison areas of the Navrongo Project, providing opportunities to assess the long-term fidelity to the operational design and its demographic consequences. Monitoring evidence demonstrates that by mid-2008, the proportion of households reached by CHPS coverage in the UER was five times that achieved in other regions (Awoonor-Williams et al, 2013). While this successful expansion of coverage has improved post-infant childhood survival in communities served by CHPS, preliminary analysis suggests the survival of infants has been unaffected (A.…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…These CHPS compounds have resident Community Health Officers (CHOs) offering door-to-door services to community members (17, 18). There are two community clinics jointly run by the Catholic Diocesan Development Office and the District Health Administration.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%