Reproductive Health (Jun 2022)

“My motivation was to save”: a qualitative study exploring factors influencing motivation of community healthcare workers in a cervical cancer screening program in Dschang, Cameroon

  • Pauline Hämmerli,
  • Alida Datchoua Moukam,
  • Ania Wisniak,
  • Jessica Sormani,
  • Pierre Vassilakos,
  • Bruno Kenfack,
  • Patrick Petignat,
  • Nicole Christine Schmidt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-022-01420-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Plain Language Summary Cervical cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related death among women in Cameroon. This is mainly due to the absence of routine cervical cancer screening programs and the lack of treatment. However, even in case of availability of cervical cancer screening programs, barriers exist. Therefore, community healthcare workers have been involved successfully to increase the screening coverage. As retention of these actors remains a challenge, the main objective of this study was to identify key factors affecting their motivation aiming to suggest interventions to address motivational factors. 11 qualitative interviews with individual community healthcare workers were conducted at a cervical cancer screening program in Dschang, Cameroon. Motivation was generally high and affecting factors were divided into the individual and the environmental level. Factors with a positive influence on motivation were mainly on the individual side while impeding factors were mainly associated with the environmental level. Ongoing collaboration with community healthcare workers is beneficial for cervical cancer screening programs, and key interventions should therefore include: (i) more training and supportive supervision; (ii) evaluation of remuneration systems by workload; and (iii) provision of job-enabling resources such as uniforms, cellphone cards and transport.

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