02653nas a2200169 4500000000100000008004100001260003300042653004100075653003600116100001200152700001500164700001400179700001200193245016200205856011100367520200500478 2021 d bResearch Square Platform LLC10aIntegrated Community Case Management10aCommunity health workers (CHWs)1 aRiri JV1 aSilumbwe A1 aMweemba C1 aZulu JM00aFacilitators and Barriers To The Integration of Integrated Community Case Management Into The Health System in Zambia: A Case Study of Kapiri Mposhi District uhttps://assets.researchsquare.com/files/rs-860562/v1/f98f9910-4e74-43b0-b30b-7602ab5aaa18.pdf?c=16306104343 aAbstract
Background
Zambia adopted the Integrated Community Case Management of childhood illness (ICCM) strategy in May 2010, targeting populations in rural communities and hard-to-reach areas. However, evidence suggests that ICCM integration into local health systems has been suboptimal, particularly at the district level. This study sought to explore factors that shape ICCM integration into the district health system in Kapiri Mposhi district, Zambia.
Methods
Data were gathered through 19 key informant interviews with district health managers, ICCM supervisors, health facility managers, and district health co-operating partners. The study was conducted in Kapiri Mposhi district, Zambia. Interviews were translated and transcribed verbatim. Data were were analyzed using thematic analysis in NVivo 11(QSR International).
Results
Facilitators to intergration of ICCM into the health system consisted of community involvement and support for the program, active community case detection and timeliness of health services, the program was not considered a significant shift from other community-based health interventions, district leadership and ownership of the program, availability of national and district-level policies supporting ICCM and engagement of international co-operating partners. Program incompatibility with some socio-cultural and religious cotexts, stock-out of prerequisite drugs and supplies, staff reshuffle and redeployment, inadequate supervision of health facilities, and nonpayment of community health worker incentives inhibited intergration of ICCM into the health system.
Conclusion
The study findings highlight key faciliators and barriers that should be considered by policy-makers, district health managers, ICCM supervisors, health facility managers, and co-operating partners, in designing context-specific implementation strategies, to ensure full integration of ICCM into the health system.