如何为社区卫生项目设计数字化绩效管理和激励干预措施:来自埃塞俄比亚的经验。

IF 7.7
PLOS digital health Pub Date : 2025-07-03 eCollection Date: 2025-07-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pdig.0000914
Alemnesh Hailemariam Mirkuzie, Yared Kifle, Gizachew Tadele Tiruneh, Girma Tadesse, Getnet Alem Teklu, Esubalew Sebsibe, Eyoel Mitiku, Aklilu Abera, Wondwossen Shiferaw, Birhutesfa Bekele, Wuleta Aklilu Betemariam, Desalew Emaway
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引用次数: 0

摘要

埃塞俄比亚的健康推广计划(HEP)面临着多方面的挑战,包括健康推广工作者(HEWs)的积极性下降和绩效不佳。这些问题严重影响了生殖、孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康(RMNCH)的结果。为了解决这些差距,JSI与主要合作伙伴合作,设计了数字化绩效管理(PM)和基于绩效的激励(PBI)干预措施,并将其集成到电子社区卫生信息系统(eCHIS)中。实施了多种方法的设计过程,包括对现有策略的景观审查、以人为本的设计(HCD)和参与式共同设计研讨会。国家和区域利益攸关方为发展进程作出贡献,以确保上下文相关性。结合目标管理(MBO)和DESC(数字化启用、装备、监督、补偿)模型的混合框架指导了设计。数字化的PM/PBI干预需要对eCHIS应用套件进行重大改进,例如通过实时监控仪表板、数字目标设置和自动监管功能增强现有的焦点人员应用程序(FPA),并开发一个国家eCHIS仪表板,用于监管支持、数据知情的绩效评估和决策。确定了22个关键绩效指标(kpi)来衡量产出、健康成果和监督过程。该干预措施整合了数字支持的监督和指导,以推动绩效改善。利益相关者建议以非经济或混合激励的方式激励每半年表现优异的团队和/或个人的卫生保健工作者、主管和卫生保健人员。总之,参与式设计过程产生了针对埃塞俄比亚HEP量身定制的稳健、可扩展的PM/PBI干预措施。数字化工具与支持性监督和可持续激励战略相结合,有可能改善卫生保健工作者的积极性、RMNCH结果和卫生系统问责制。这一模式为其他资源匮乏的地区在社区卫生项目中实施绩效管理系统提供了宝贵的经验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

What does it take to design digitally enabled performance management and incentive interventions for community health programs: Lessons from Ethiopia.

What does it take to design digitally enabled performance management and incentive interventions for community health programs: Lessons from Ethiopia.

The Health Extension Program (HEP) in Ethiopia has faced multifaceted challenges, including declining motivation and suboptimal performance of Health Extension Workers (HEWs). These issues have significantly impacted Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) outcomes. To address these gaps, JSI, in collaboration with key partners, designed digitally enabled performance management (PM) and performance-based incentive (PBI) interventions integrated into the electronic Community Health Information System (eCHIS). A multi-approach design process was implemented, including a landscape review of existing strategies, human-centered design (HCD), and participatory co-design workshops. National and regional stakeholders contributed to the development process to ensure contextual relevance. A hybrid framework combining Management by Objectives (MBO) and the DESC (Digitally enabled, Equipped, Supervised, Compensated) model guided the design. The digitally enabled PM/PBI interventions required significant advancement to the eCHIS application suite, such as enhancing the existing focal person application (FPA) with real-time monitoring dashboards, digital target setting, and automated supervision features, and developing a national eCHIS dashboard for supervisory support, data-informed performance evaluation, and decision making. Twenty-two key performance indicators (KPIs) were identified to measure outputs, health outcomes, and supervisory processes. The intervention integrated digitally supported supervision and mentorship to drive performance improvements. Stakeholders proposed incentivizing the HEWs, supervisors, and HPs who record high performance biannually as a team and/or an individual with non-financial or mixed incentives. In conclusion, the participatory design process resulted in robust, scalable PM/PBI interventions tailored to Ethiopia's HEP. Digitally enabled tools, when aligned with supportive supervision and sustainable incentive strategies, have the potential to improve HEW motivation, RMNCH outcomes, and health system accountability. This model offers valuable lessons for other low-resource settings implementing performance management systems in community health programs.

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