Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study

Abstract Background Community-based para-professionals are trained or untrained professionals who assist in the delivery of health-related care in communities where they live. The role of community-based para-professionals in supporting early childhood development (ECD) supports has attracted increa...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emma Claire Pearson, Maxwell Peprah Opoku
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-01-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-12297-5
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832585932691210240
author Emma Claire Pearson
Maxwell Peprah Opoku
author_facet Emma Claire Pearson
Maxwell Peprah Opoku
author_sort Emma Claire Pearson
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Community-based para-professionals are trained or untrained professionals who assist in the delivery of health-related care in communities where they live. The role of community-based para-professionals in supporting early childhood development (ECD) supports has attracted increased attention recently, particularly in the context of severe constraints in the global health workforce. However, these practitioners face challenges associated with low status and poor working conditions. In response, the study reported here aimed to gather expert views on essential knowledge, skills and competencies for this workforce, to contribute to strengthened recognition of their unique role in supporting ECD. Objectives The objective of the study reported here was to contribute to evidence that provides insight into essential training needs of professionals and para-professionals providing ECD services to families and children in low-income contexts. This paper focuses specifically on findings related to training needs of community-based para-professionals. Method A Delphi study was conducted to reach consensus among 14 global experts around essential training needs of ECD workers delivering nurturing care in low-resource contexts. Three rounds of open-ended and rating scale data were collected. Results Strong consensus was found among experts around a unique set of Skills; Knowledge and Dispositions that should be supported through training for community-based para-professionals. A key feature threaded across these three training components was strong emphasis on effective communication and relationship-building with families and communities, to ensure that early childhood development programmes are culturally-responsive and authentic. This supports previous work that has highlighted the important ‘bridging’ role of community-based workers, particularly in communities at risk of marginalization. Conclusion The findings provide a basis for supporting and strengthening this important workforce, through advocacy around (i) their unique contributions in supporting contextually-sensitive, responsive ECD, (ii) training approaches and strategies that support and build on these contributions, and (iii) mechanisms to support stronger recognition through career pathways and training needs that are shared with other ECD cadre groups (including health and education professionals).
format Article
id doaj-art-a08753f309a94014af2328c6d44be027
institution Kabale University
issn 1472-6963
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Health Services Research
spelling doaj-art-a08753f309a94014af2328c6d44be0272025-01-26T12:22:15ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632025-01-0125111210.1186/s12913-025-12297-5Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi studyEmma Claire Pearson0Maxwell Peprah Opoku1Froebel Department of Primary and Early Childhood Education, Maynooth UniversityCollege of Education, United Arab Emirates UniversityAbstract Background Community-based para-professionals are trained or untrained professionals who assist in the delivery of health-related care in communities where they live. The role of community-based para-professionals in supporting early childhood development (ECD) supports has attracted increased attention recently, particularly in the context of severe constraints in the global health workforce. However, these practitioners face challenges associated with low status and poor working conditions. In response, the study reported here aimed to gather expert views on essential knowledge, skills and competencies for this workforce, to contribute to strengthened recognition of their unique role in supporting ECD. Objectives The objective of the study reported here was to contribute to evidence that provides insight into essential training needs of professionals and para-professionals providing ECD services to families and children in low-income contexts. This paper focuses specifically on findings related to training needs of community-based para-professionals. Method A Delphi study was conducted to reach consensus among 14 global experts around essential training needs of ECD workers delivering nurturing care in low-resource contexts. Three rounds of open-ended and rating scale data were collected. Results Strong consensus was found among experts around a unique set of Skills; Knowledge and Dispositions that should be supported through training for community-based para-professionals. A key feature threaded across these three training components was strong emphasis on effective communication and relationship-building with families and communities, to ensure that early childhood development programmes are culturally-responsive and authentic. This supports previous work that has highlighted the important ‘bridging’ role of community-based workers, particularly in communities at risk of marginalization. Conclusion The findings provide a basis for supporting and strengthening this important workforce, through advocacy around (i) their unique contributions in supporting contextually-sensitive, responsive ECD, (ii) training approaches and strategies that support and build on these contributions, and (iii) mechanisms to support stronger recognition through career pathways and training needs that are shared with other ECD cadre groups (including health and education professionals).https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-12297-5TrainingPara-professionalsCommunity-based workersEarly childhood developmentPublic healthLow-resource contexts
spellingShingle Emma Claire Pearson
Maxwell Peprah Opoku
Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study
BMC Health Services Research
Training
Para-professionals
Community-based workers
Early childhood development
Public health
Low-resource contexts
title Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study
title_full Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study
title_fullStr Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study
title_short Understanding the unique role of community-based para-professionals delivering early childhood development in low-resource contexts: a Delphi study
title_sort understanding the unique role of community based para professionals delivering early childhood development in low resource contexts a delphi study
topic Training
Para-professionals
Community-based workers
Early childhood development
Public health
Low-resource contexts
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-12297-5
work_keys_str_mv AT emmaclairepearson understandingtheuniqueroleofcommunitybasedparaprofessionalsdeliveringearlychildhooddevelopmentinlowresourcecontextsadelphistudy
AT maxwellpeprahopoku understandingtheuniqueroleofcommunitybasedparaprofessionalsdeliveringearlychildhooddevelopmentinlowresourcecontextsadelphistudy