Training Community Health Workers to Respond to Public Health Demands.

Publication date: Oct 16, 2024

Community health workers (CHWs) connect individuals to community resources and build individual competence in an effort to improve overall community/public health. There is a need for more research on how community health nurse (CHN)-led training programs are needed to help train and support CHWs. The purpose was to describe the development and evaluation of a series of CHN-led CHW trainings on CHW role, boundaries, and motivational interviewing; diabetes; mental health and long COVID; sexually transmitted infections; and lead poisoning prevention and treatment. This study utilized a one-group pretest-posttest design in which quantitative and qualitative data were collected. The sample consisted of CHWs representing White/Caucasian, Black/African American, Hispanic/Latinx, and Asian American populations who for each topic, completed a pretest one week prior to the training, the training, and a posttest one week after the training. The quantitative and qualitative data collected during winter and spring/summer 2023 underwent statistical and thematic analysis, respectively. The results suggest that the CHW trainings were effective overall at increasing participants’ knowledge and confidence in their knowledge levels, as well as comfort with educating community members on various public health topics. Information learned and found most helpful, and application and utilization plans for this knowledge in their work were revealed. CHWs are important for disseminating health communication and education among members of their communities, and play a key role in reducing health disparities among at-risk populations. CHN-led educational intervention is a strategy to improve CHWs’ knowledge, confidence, and comfort.

Concepts Keywords
African Chn
Diabetes Chw
Hispanic Chws
Spring Collected
Therapy Community
Improve
Led
Posttest
Pretest
Public
Qualitative
Quantitative
Training
Trainings
Workers

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO role
disease MESH long COVID
disease MESH sexually transmitted infections
disease MESH health disparities
disease IDO intervention

Original Article

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