Female community health volunteers’ knowledge and confidence in providing community-based diabetes self-management support in Nepal: A biphasic mixed method evaluation
Ada Thapa, Susagya Bhusal, Omkar Jha, Adipti Pantha, Sudim Sharma, Austin Seals, Madhav K. C, Archana Shrestha, Bibhav Acharya, Yashashwi Pokharel, Baldeep Dhaliwal, Baldeep Dhaliwal

TL;DR
This study evaluates how training improves female health volunteers' knowledge and confidence in supporting diabetes care in rural Nepal.
Contribution
A mixed-methods evaluation of training's impact on community health volunteers' diabetes self-management support in Nepal.
Findings
Training improved FCHVs' knowledge and confidence in diabetes self-management support.
Barriers like inadequate incentives persisted, but community trust in FCHVs increased.
Short training sessions can enhance confidence and knowledge with proper support.
Abstract
Self-management support by community health workers, referred to as Female Community Health Volunteers (FCHVs) in Nepal, can enhance diabetes care in resource-constrained settings. We assessed FCHVs’ knowledge, perceived self-efficacy, and barriers to supporting diabetes self-management before and after training. Guided by the Health Belief Model, we conducted a biphasic, Qual + quan, concurrent, embedded mixed-methods evaluations among 28 FCHVs in four wards in rural mid-Western Nepal. We evaluated the program into two phases, each consisting of focus group discussions (FGDs); trainings that included didactics, hands-on-practice, and role play demonstrations; and pre- and post-training surveys. Phase 2 occurred nine months after Phase 1. We conducted trainings and evaluations over 4–5 hours/ward/phase. FGD data were analyzed using both deductive and inductive coding and emerging themes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes Management and Education · Global Maternal and Child Health · Community Health and Development
