Strengthening rehabilitation services in rural communities: Considerations for community-oriented primary care
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17159/23110-3833/2025/vol55no1a11Keywords:
community-based rehabilitation, mid-level workers, community health workers, rural development, community-based disability, inclusive development, health systems strengtheningAbstract
This opinion piece is based on a study that investigated the contribution of Rehabilitation `Care Workers in strengthening rehabilitation in community-based services at the primary level of care level and a collaborative inquiry with the rehabilitation teams responsible fofr outreach community services in a rural district. We are of the opinion that rural contexts require a different set of community-based rehabilitation (CPR) competencies than those applicable in better-resourced urban and per-urban settings. We investigated the health system strengthening benefits of CBR as a facet of community orientated primary care (COPC), which focuses on the inter-sectoral services that rehabilitation care workers who are supervised by rehabilitation therapists can offer to persons with disabilities. We endorse extant public health literature on the urgent need to build rural inclusive health workforce capacity, suggesting that human resource shortages for rehabilitation n rural areas can be addressed through training mid-level, multi-skilled workers who are part of the ward-based teams with rehabilitation therapists. Community health workers (CHWs0 in rural areas who upgrade their skills set to include competencies in community-based disability inclusive development practice and address the rehabilitation service gaps faced by persons with disabilities and their families.
Implications for practice:
- Embedding community-based disability inclusive development practices in COPC will promote access to rehabilitation services in rural communities.
- In addition to nurse-led, ward-based teams of CHWs, ward-based teams of RCWs led by rehabilitation therapists will strengthen the primary level rural health system.
- Health outcomes of rural populations withn disability will be improved by access to RCWs with competencies in inter-sectoral collaboration.
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