Transforming multi-stakeholder engagement towards coproduction of optimized maternal, newborn, and child health and a resilient community health system in rural Ethiopia: A qualitative study
Akalewold T Gebremeskel,
Ogochukwu Udenigwe,
Josephine Etowa and
Sanni Yaya
PLOS ONE, 2025, vol. 20, issue 8, 1-26
Abstract:
Introduction: In Ethiopia, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (MNCH) outcomes have been improving, however, the current level of Maternal and under-five children mortality remains the highest in the world. Despite the rhetoric around the significance of multi-stakeholder engagement as a buzzword in development theories and polices to improve health and other development outcomes, there is limited evidence on how multi-stakeholders intersect and mutually reinforce each other toward the coproduction of improved MNCH outcomes and a resilient community health system. The aim of this manuscript is to examine barriers to and facilitators of coproduction in the context of multi-stakeholder engagement to optimize MNCH outcomes and a resilient community health system in rural Ethiopia. Methods: We conducted a qualitative case study in West Shewa Zone, rural Ethiopia. A purposive sampling technique was used to recruit participants. Data sources were two focus groups discussions with CHWs, twelve key informant interviews with multilevel public health policy actors, and a policy document review related to the CHW program to triangulate the finding. Thematic analysis of the qualitative data was conducted. Our study was informed by multiple theoretical frameworks including the World Health Organization’s building block framework, state- society synergy model to inform the research processes and analysis. Results: In the context of multi-stakeholder approach, our analysis revealed the multilevel barriers to and facilitators of coproduction in the community health landscape in rural Ethiopia. The major barriers of coproduction include lack of vertical and horizontal alignment, lack of continuum of and sustainable engagement practice,lack of systemic coordination platforms, and Inadequate coordination and implementation capacity. Major facilitators of coproduction include embedded integrated community health system, promising macro-level multi-stakeholder and community-level engagement and coproduction aspects. Conclusions: Our study reveals mixed policy and practice-related results, the current multi-stakeholder engagement is necessary but insufficient and fragmented to coproduce optimized MNCH outcomes and ensure a resilient health system in rural Ethiopia. Moving beyond the current multi-stakeholder engagement as a buzzword in health polices to practice through, embracing meaningful coproduction frameworks is fundamental while building on multi-stakeholder engagement efforts to optimize MNCH outcomes and a resilient community health system. A coproduction framework leverages the intersection and mutual reinforcement of multi-stakeholder synergy throughout the CHWs’ program cycle through shared power and joint assessment, planning, implementing, decision making and evaluating. Fostering effective multi-stakeholder engagement synergy requires balanced shared power, alignment to community priorities, systemic mapping, coordination and monitoring, and continuum and sustainability of engagement strategies. Beyond donor initiatives and a dependency approach, proactive health diplomacy strategies are also important to sustain the existing and attract new actors to realize sustainable positive health outcomes and a resilient community health policy and strategy.
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0330159
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0330159
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