Cancer
Pract 1999 Jan-Feb;7(1):16-21
What lay health advisors do: An evaluation of advisors' activities.
Earp JA, Flax VL.
Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public
Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.
PURPOSE: Since the 1970s, health promotion and disease
prevention programs that rely on lay health advisors have proliferated,
making it important to ascertain the levels and types of activity that
can reasonably be expected from such advisors. This report describes the
activities of lay health advisors participating in a program to increase
mammography screening by older African American women and shares lessons
that the authors learned about evaluating advisors' activities.
DESCRIPTION OF STUDY: Between September 1994 and January
1996, 144 lay health advisors, associated with the North Carolina Breast
Cancer Screening Program, were asked to complete, on a periodic basis,
a standardized, self-administered activity report that asked about group
presentations in the past 3 months and one-on-one contacts in the past
week. Eighty-five advisors submitted one or more reports. The authors
tabulated responses for lay health advisors overall, for those turning
in one or more reports, and for those reporting a specific type of activity.
RESULTS: The responses showed that North Carolina Breast
Cancer Screening Program lay health advisors made approximately one group
presentation every 3 months and had one to three individual contacts per
week. Group presentations were commonly in churches and homes, and focused
on who needs a mammogram, how then, and where to get one. During one-on-one
encounters, advisors primarily encouraged women to get mammograms or discussed
fears about mammograms.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Information about lay health advisor
activities serves several important purposes. Such information allows
programs to identify the types of messages that lay health advisors transmit
and the number of contacts they make, while also identifying the groups
that are more and less difficult to reach, and the topics and locations
favored by advisors and the women they contact. Activity data may indicate
what resources or other support the advisors need, whether in-service
training is necessary, and how to enhance the recruitment and training
of additional lay health advisors.
PMID: 9892999 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]