AI Article Synopsis

  • A call center was established in Greater Accra, Ghana, in 2015 to enhance decision-making and referrals for maternal and newborn care, with a study aimed at evaluating its organizational functioning.
  • Findings revealed that call center staff adhered well to protocols, demonstrated strong client service, and exhibited resilience despite facing limited resources and a lack of experience.
  • However, issues such as some staff feeling excluded from decision-making and working conditions impacting efficiency highlighted the need for a stronger focus on locally driven approaches and organizational resilience to improve health outcomes in resource-limited settings.

Article Abstract

A call center was designed and started implementation in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana in 2015, to support frontline provider decision-making and referral for maternal and new born care. This study aimed to understand the organizational functioning of the center and lessons for design improvement, implementation, and scale-up. The study design was a single case study. Data collection involved participant and nonparticipant observation, conversations, and in-depth interviews with call center staff. Data were coded and analyzed manually. Findings showed a high adherence to call center protocols, good client service skills, a strong local sense of ownership of the center, and staff resilience in performing their functions despite a context of scarce resources and no prior experience with running a call center. Perceptions of lack of involvement of some call center staff in decision-making, and the resource constrained working conditions sometimes hampered the functioning of the center. The locally driven bottom-up process used to establish the center appeared to be an important element in sustaining it despite the resource constraints. More attention to locally driven bottom-up approaches, organizational functioning, and resilience are critical to develop and sustain innovations for health outcome improvement in resource-constrained contexts.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hpm.2595DOI Listing

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