AN ASSESSMENT OF THE ROLES OF HEALTH AGENCIES IN THE PROMOTION OF HEALTH AMONG COMMUNITIES IN ESAN WEST LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREA OF EDO STATE

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ABSTRACT


This study was undertaken to examine the roles of health agencies in the promotion of health in selected communities in Esan West local government area.  The study was limited to Esan West Local Government Area of Edo state. Questionnaires were designed to elicit information, which served as the basis for the assessment of the various research questions of the study. The population of the study comprised women attending antenatal care in Esan West Local Government Area of Edo State. The sample for the study included 100 subjects (or respondents). The simple random sampling technique was used to select the sample for the study from five healthcare centres in Esan West Local Government Area. The study found that: There are no regular health campaigns in most of the communities visited for the study, although general health campaigns were rare, Child immunization is regular in these communities. There are no adequate facilities in the community health centres. Children are taught in schools health and hygiene practices; the impact of teachers in enlightening residents on proper health habits is minimal. The only form of health education relieved by the people comes from antenatal care centres. The role of NGOs in financing health programs in these communities as well as the provision of vaccines is unhidden. Following the findings above, the study recommends among others that there should be regular health campaigns in communities; the government should ensure there are adequate facilities in community health centres and Antenatal care service should be made available and accessible in every community; the school as a primary health agency should ensure that children are though in schools health hygiene practices.

 




 

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Title Page-      -           -           -           -           -           -           -           i

Certification-  -           -           -           -           -           -           -           iii

Dedication-     -           -           -           -           -           -           -           iv

Acknowledgement-    -           -           -           -           -           -           v

Abstract-         -           -           -           -           -           -           -           viii


CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION

Background to the Study-       -           -           -           -           -           1

Statement of problem-            -           -           -           -           -           -            7

Purpose of the Study- -           -           -           -           -           -           8

Research Questions-   -           -           -           -           -           -           8

Scope of the Study-    -           -           -           -           -           -           9

Limitation of the Study -                    -           -           -           -           9

Significance of the Study       -           -           -           -           -           9

Definition of Terms-  -           -           -           -           -           -           10


CHAPTER TWO: REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE

Concept of health and health agency-            -           -           -           -            12

Health promotion-      -           -           -           -           -           -           13

Factors affecting community health- -           -           -           -           15

Role of health agencies in institutions of learning-   -           -           17

Established health agencies   -           -           -           -           -           25

Roles of international health agencies-          -           -           -           29

Use of antenatal care by pregnant women-    -           -           -           34

Summary of literature review-           -           -           -           -            36       


CHAPTER THREE: METHODOLOGY

Research Design of the study -           -           -           -           -           38           

Population of the study-         -           -           -           -           -           38

Sample and Sampling Technique-     -           -           -           -           39           

Research Instrument- -           -           -           -           -           -           39           

Validity -        -           -           -           -           -           -           -           39           

Reliability-     -           -           -           -           -           -           -           40

Administration of instrument             -           -           -           -           -            40

Method of Data analysis -      -           -           -           -           -           40           

 

CHAPTER FOUR: DATA ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS

Discussion of Findings -         -           -           -           -           -           46   

        

CHAPTER FIVE:  SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Summary        -           --         -           -           -           -           -           49

Conclusion-    -           -           -           -           -           -           -           50           

Recommendations -    -           -           -           -           -           -           51

REFERENCES-          -           -           -           -           -           -           52           

Appendix-       -           -           -           -           -           -           -           55           

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION

1.1 Background to the Study

Over the past 20 years, the number of international actors involved in disease outbreaks and health emergency responses has dramatically increased (Laverack, 2017). In the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, for example, several hundred international non-governmental organizations were mobilized alongside the United Nations, the government and the private sector, greatly increasing the complexity of the situation. The global outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic is the most recent in the global events of health concerns. These concerns have continued to place a higher demand on various agencies to provide some kind of support in the quest to promote community and ultimately global health (Robinson, 2022).

The growing number of such events has placed pressure on the availability of funding opportunities and, at the same time, there has been a realization that the goal of involving communities, though not as successful as expected yet, continues to play a crucial role in the successful confrontation of community health concerns (Park, Reber, & Chon, 2016). The transmission of communicable diseases between countries is also a growing issue in which one country cannot be separated from another because connections between people span national, geographic and cultural borders. For example, the rapid spread of the Ebola virus in West Africa was exasperated by the cross-border movement of people and by an already fragile healthcare system not designed to contain a disease outbreak

An outbreak can refer to an increase, often sudden, in the number of cases of a disease above the endemic level in the population within a restricted geographical area or may extend over a much broader area and may last for a prolonged period (Watt, Williams, & Sheiham, 2014). A health emergency occurs when the consequences have the potential to overwhelm the capabilities of the health system to contain the problem. Disease outbreaks and health emergencies are closely connected and the term “disease outbreaks” has been used in this commentary to cover both contexts (WordPress, 2016).

Health promotion has a key role to play in disease outbreaks because it can offer well-established approaches that can be utilized as part of a response. These are essentially bottom-up approaches that actively involve communities as the way forward and integrate local expertise and civil society networks for the delivery of activities. The role of health promotion includes data collection, communication, community capacity-building and engagement, and rumour and resistance management.

In the post-outbreak response, health promotion also has a valuable role in addressing stigma, working with survivors and providing social support to families and communities. Community engagement is an especially important but underestimated activity that is a crucial step to help others address the risks that are caused by an outbreak (Damian & Gallo, 2020). Communication is also an important approach encompassing health communication and communication for development which are used to promote positive health behaviors. Hygiene promotion campaigns, for example, prevent person-to-person disease transmission by targeting individuals to hand-wash with soap. However, the emphasis on individual responsibility must avoid leading to accusations of ‘victim-blaming’, making people feel guilty about their state of health even though certain risk factors are outside of their control, for example not having proper quarantine facilities to prevent cross-infection. The guiding principle is to facilitate people to make informed choices to collectively modify their behaviour by identifying their needs and then by taking actions to resolve them, such as self-quarantine and disinfection to avoid infection. The critical point is that disease outbreaks can only be fully addressed by helping people to empower themselves rather than simply trying to change their behaviour. The difference is whether or not the approach gives the health promoter the authority to control the situation, for example through setting the agenda. If it does, it is less likely to be empowering. If it facilitates a process of needs assessment, planning and capacity-building toward collective action, it has a much better chance of success. The advantage of empowerment is that it strengthens the whole, the individual, the family group, and the community. Empowerment increases autonomy, and personal skills, and gives people the control they need to achieve healthier lives.

Health promotion has an important role in the post-outbreak period as it increases awareness about available facilities and promotes the use of services such as vaccination, counselling and welfare initiatives. Health promotion can help to build social support networks for the survivors of an outbreak and to counter stigma and isolation. Several medical complications have been reported in survivors, for example in those of Ebola and Zika diseases, including eye and neurological problems such as microcephaly and Guillain-Barré syndrome. Health promotion support includes counselling survivors, mobilizing communities to assist with rehabilitation services for people with disabilities, social support through self-help groups and networking with patients dealing with long-term psychosocial complications (International Conference on Health Promotion, 2016)

The responsibility for maintaining and improving public health lies with all sectors of society. Society's efforts have been carried out through a combination of personal health care (sometimes called "medical care") and public health systems. Through the activities of both private and governmental healthcare providers, organizations, and institutions, the personal healthcare system provides primarily curative services, such as treating illnesses and injuries, to individuals with relatively little attention to prevention. The financing of these services comes from the out-of-pocket payments of patients, private health insurance, and government. However, to enhance and maintain the public's health, preventive programs and activities are needed. The public health system focuses on prevention through population-based health promotion public services and interventions which protect entire populations from illness, disease, and injury. The primary providers of these public health services are government public health agencies (Perkins, 2010).

Public health agencies in communities are responsible for protecting, assessing, and assuring individual, community, and environmental health. These agencies build partnerships and often provide or coordinate direct services to ensure that there is access to adequate health services in a community. Public health agencies have particularly played this role in efforts to reduce the toll from illness, injury, and environmental and other risks. They have also directly taken on the challenges of addressing the healthcare service needs of the most vulnerable and at-risk individuals and groups. Public health agencies meet obligations to their communities in many different ways: by fostering a wide range of policy-guided community initiatives to promote health and improve health conditions; through the collection, monitoring, and dissemination of information about health status and disease occurrence; through the direct provision of service in the community and the home; and community education. Another role public health agencies play is to regulate sources of risk and promote health and safety practices, such as by licensing restaurants and health facilities and regulating water and air quality.

Public health tasks are carried out primarily by governmental health and environmental protection agencies at local, state, and national levels. Some non-governmental organizations and private individuals perform public health activities in cooperation with or at the request of government agencies. Frequently, the government agency provides either financial or technical assistance. Because the government functions as a representative of the people and needs to be responsive to them, the ultimate responsibility for public health activities must lie with government agencies. Non-governmental organizations carry out many useful activities. However, only government agencies derive their authority from the entire community, locality, and nation and are therefore accountable to the entire public. Public health agencies, even while being cost-conscious, are in principle not constrained by profit motives or by agendas other than that of the public's health (American Public Health Association, APHA, 2015).

1.2 Statement of Problem

There is no denying the fact that our healthcare index is very poor and that the majority of our people are suffering. Today, Esan West Local Government Area has been rated as one of the local governments with high maternal morbidity and infant mortality rates in Edo state. This is because public hospitals and health centres are grossly under-equipped while private hospitals provide high-cost health and medical services, to the detriment of the poor. Also, self-medication is on the increase just as the market for quackery has blossomed in the community (Aganaba 2018).

Ojo, (2014), identifying with the above, stated that the factors contributing to the dwindling effect of community health administration in any rural area, including inadequate funding of health care delivery services by the local government, the rising cost of treatment, poor integration of private health sector, low public enlightenment and lack of community involvement and participation. With these problems, already plaguing communities in Esan West Local Government Area, and continuous outbreaks of diseases (i.e. Lassa fever) there is an urgent need for community health promotion that focuses on living disease-free lives rather than curing diseases. And there is a need to re-examine the functions of established health agencies in accomplishing this task.

1.3 Purpose of the Study

The purpose of carrying out this study is to examine the roles of health agencies in the promotion of health in selected communities in Esan West local government area. The study specifically aims at;

·       Assessing the roles of primary health agencies in promoting community health

·       Examining the roles of educational institutions as health agencies                                                                                                         

·       Roles of non-governmental organizations in the promotion of community health


1.4 Research Questions

1.     What are the roles of health agencies in the promotion of health in communities?

2.     What are the roles of primary health agencies in the promotion of community health?

3.     What are the roles of the school as an agency for health promotion?

4.What are the roles of non-governmental organizations in the promotion of community health?


1.5 Scope/Delimitation of the Study

This project work is meant to examine the roles of health agencies in the promotion of health in selected communities in Esan West local government area, and thus the findings are restricted to Esan West Local Government Area of Edo state.

1.6 Limitations of the Study

In carrying out this research, several challenges are envisaged by the researcher such as:

·       Failure, of respondents, to return all administered questionnaire

·       Irregular completion of the questionnaires which may lead to rejection

·       Respondents may not understand the purpose of the study and thus may not take the exercise seriously.


1.7 Significance of the Study

The findings of this study would help to educate members of the public, particularly in Esan West LGA, on the roles of health agencies in promoting health in their communities, thereby making it easy for members of society to offer their cooperative, efforts in the joint responsibility (between the agencies and community members) of promoting community health. It will help remind the government and public health workers of their health obligation to members of society. That is the responsibility of promoting the health of its citizens. It will help as a reference source for researchers who, in the future, may want to carry out studies in this area.

1.8 Operational Definition of Terms

Primary Health Care: This is an essential health care made universally accessible to individuals and families in the community

Community Mobilization: This is a process of encouraging and arousing the interest of members of a given community to be actively involved in identifying their problems and planning for solutions to them, to ensure self-reliance and initiative.

Community diagnosis: This is the process of finding out the needs (problems) of a particular community with the assistance of members of the community.

Advocacy: Advocacy in primary health care simply means the process of creating awareness of certain health programs

Health: This is defined as a state of complete physical, social and mental well-being of an individual and not mainly the absence of disease or infirmities.

Community: Is defined as a specific group of people living in a defined geographical area, who share a common culture, values and norms and are arranged in a social structure according to relationships over time.

Management: This is the organization and coordination of the activities of an enterprise following certain policies in the achievement of defined objectives.



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