Participation in primary health care through community-level health committees in Sub-Saharan Africa: a qualitative synthesis

BMC Public Health. 2022 Feb 19;22(1):359. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-12730-y.

Abstract

Background: Health committees are key mechanisms for enabling participation of community members in decision-making on matters related to their health. This paper aims to establish an in-depth understanding of how community members participate in primary health care through health committees in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).

Methods: We searched peer-reviewed English articles published between 2010 and 2019 in MEDLINE, Popline and CINAHL databases. Articles were eligible if they involved health committees in SSA. Our search yielded 279 articles and 7 duplicates were removed. We further excluded 255 articles following a review of titles and abstracts by two authors. Seventeen abstracts were eligible for full text review. After reviewing the full-text, we further excluded two articles that did not explicitly describe the role of health committees in community participation. We therefore included 15 articles in this review. Two authors extracted data on how health committees contributed to community participation in SSA using a conceptual framework for assessing community participation in health. We derived our themes from five process indicators in this framework, namely, leadership, management and planning, resource mobilization from external sources, monitoring and evaluation and women involvement.

Findings: We found that health committees work well in voicing communities' concerns about the quality of care provided by health facility staff, day-to-day management of health facilities and mobilizing financial and non-financial resources for health activities and projects. Health committees held health workers accountable by monitoring absenteeism, quality of services and expenditures in health facilities. Health committees lacked legitimacy because selection procedures were often not transparent and participatory. Committee members were left out in planning and budgeting processes by health workers, who perceived them as insufficiently educated and trained to take part in planning. Most health committees were male-dominated, thus limiting participation by women.

Conclusion: Health committees contribute to community participation through holding primary health workers accountable, voicing their communities' concern and mobilizing resources for health activities and projects. Decision makers, health managers and advocates need to fundamentally rethink how health committees are selected, empowered and supported to implement their roles and responsibilities.

Keywords: Community engagement; Community participation; Health committee; Social accountability.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Africa South of the Sahara
  • Community Participation*
  • Female
  • Health Personnel
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Primary Health Care / methods
  • Social Responsibility*