Indicator monitoring the availability of human resources key to delivering community-based intervention.
Numerator
Total number of community health workers in crisis affected areas in a defined administrative or health area at a given point in time
Denominator
The total population for the same administrative or health area at the same point in time
Disaggregation
Administrative Area; health area; sex of community health workers; support/no support from humanitarian organisations;
Indicator used for response monitoring ?
Yes
Types
Baseline
Output
Threshold / Standard
>=10 community health workers per 10 000 population Follow-up of trends
General guidance
Interpretation: This indicator is a snapshot of the situation at a certain period of time. At the pre-crisis phase, this indicator will indicate the baseline availability of work force. In the early phase after a crisis occurs, this indicator will show the consequences of the crisis (decrease/reduction in work force reporting to the facilities) when compared to pre-crisis and the needs in term of support. At later stages of crisis, trends in this indicator will allow to monitor the response in supporting health services. Limitation: this indicator measures the availability of work force but does not measure the competencies of the work force. Competencies should be further appraised.
Guidance on phases
There is a differing level of quality of data which can be collected at different phases of the emergency depending on the context, eg the data available and the systems for data collection in place before the crisis, the accessibility of the affected areas, the resources on the ground, etc...
Phase applicability
Pre-crisis/Baseline
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
Phase 4
Guidance for pre-crisis/baseline
Number of health workers, administrative boundaries, health areas boundaries, population per administrative areas and population per health areas should be available for crisis-prone countries, possibly as part of the COD/FOD, as a prepardness instrument
Data Sources
Numerator: health statistics; assessment of service availability (eg SARA, HeRAMS); Denominator: administrative boundaries; health areas boundaries; population per administrative area; population per health areas;
Comments
Further guidance: Monitoring the building blocks of the health system (http://www.who.int/healthinfo/systems/monitoring/en/index.html)