Community Health
Championing countries’ efforts to extend the reach and range of their community health services
Strong community health systems are essential for meeting malaria and child health goals and for achieving PMI’s strategic objectives. Community health workers (CHWs) have demonstrated the ability to provide testing and treatment for malaria, diarrhea, pneumonia, and other childhood diseases. They make lifesaving care accessible to millions of people—an equity-based, proven approach for reducing child mortality. CHWs also play an active role in case follow-up and investigation in elimination settings.
PMI has supported countries in their journeys to scale up community case management since its launch, investing millions every year in community health worker training, supervision, and supplies. Despite these investments, major challenges remain in maintaining a well-supported, equipped, and fairly compensated community health workforce.
Coordinating with counterparts within and outside the U.S. government, PMI champions national efforts extend the reach and range of community health services and to finance, professionalize, and institutionalize community health worker programs as an integral part of the formal health system:
- PMI scales up community-based models of care that go further to reach the unreached with malaria testing and treatment. These approaches will vary according to the local context and may include the expansion of malaria community case management beyond young children to include patients of all ages and proactive visits by community health workers to bring testing and treatment to the household.
- PMI catalyzes funder and host-government investment, through both advocacy and provision of direct support of payment for community health workers for the first time, in these essential cadres and work to abolish the pay gap for women working on the frontlines.
- PMI invests in supply chains, protective equipment, training, supervision, and regular communication between community health workers and clinic staff.
- PMI strengthens health management information systems to collect disaggregated community-level data for use by CHWs and at all levels of the health systems.
Stories From the Field
Dr. Raj Panjabi’s Closing Remarks at Launch of a National Georeferenced Community Health Worker Master List
This event marked the official launch of the first ever implementation guide to support national governments and their technical and financial partners to develop a functional, continuously maintained, shared and institutionalized CHW master list hosted in a national registry.
U.S. Global Malaria Coordinator Op-Ed in The Hill
U.S. Global Malaria Coordinator Dr. Raj Panjabi penned an op-ed for The Hill describing how the COVID-19 pandemic has helped malaria resurge. The impacts of COVID-19 led to 47,000 additional people dying from malaria [...]
Kenya’s Community Health Volunteers Turn the Tide Against Malaria on Lake Victoria
Photos Credit: Catherine Ndungu, PMI Impact Malaria. The scenic view of Lake Victoria welcomes you to the township of Sindo, in Kenya’s southwest corner. Colorful wooden fishing boats line the shore as groups [...]
Peace Corps Service in Senegal Prepared Volunteers for Malaria Career
Leah, returned Peace Corp volunteer from Senegal, preparing a meal in her village. In 2012, Peace Corps volunteer Leah Moriarty was wrapping up her time in Saraya, Senegal and getting ready to pass the baton [...]