In April 2021, following the Federal government's decision, an intervention was designed to execute COVID-19 home-based care training program for the LHWs in all provinces to avoid overcrowding in large hospitals so that critically ill patients can get due attention and treatment. The training curriculum was developed in local languages following guidance from NIH and WHO. Basic health units were used as the venue for training and the doctors delivered the sessions as master trainers. Around 46,000 LHWs completed the training all over Pakistan and started visiting their catchment households to identify and counsel any COVID-19 patients and families on home-based care. Their post-training impressions showed that 97% were satisfied with the content, rigour, quality of training, and that they received the most updated information on COVID-19 from reliable sources. Training of these LHWs enhanced their skills for dealing with COVID-19 patients and helped ease the pressure on a stressed and over-burdened hospitals. This intervention exemplifies task shifting to LHWs, hence addressing the issue of insufficient health workforce in the hospitals and extending public healthcare to rural communities. Key Words: COVID-19, Home-based care, Health system, Lady health workers, Pakistan.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.29271/jcpsp.2023.02.227DOI Listing

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