The Nevada Certification Board (NCB) Community Health Worker (CHW) Competencies
NCB has adopted the Community Health Worker Core Consensus (C3) Project Roles and Competencies (C3 Project, 2018, www.C3Project.org).
| A) Community Health Worker Roles/Scope of Practice | |
|---|---|
Role: Functions that CHWs serve in communities and the health care system. For example, CHWs provide health education. |
| Role | Sub-roles |
|---|---|
| 1. Cultural Mediation Among Individuals, Communities, and Health and Social Service Systems | a. Educating individuals and communities about how to use health and social service systems (including understanding how systems operate) |
| 2. Providing Culturally Appropriate Health Education and Information | a. Conducting health promotion and disease prevention education in a manner that matches linguistic and cultural needs of participants or community |
| 3. Care Coordination, Case Management, and System Navigation | a. Participating in care coordination and/or case management |
| 4. Providing Coaching and Social Support | a. Providing individual support and coaching |
| 5. Advocating for Individuals and Communities | a. Advocating for the needs and perspectives of communities |
| 6. Building Individual and Community Capacity | a. Building individual capacity |
| 7. Providing Direct Service | a. Providing basic screening tests (e.g., height, weight, blood pressure) |
| 8. Implementing Individual and Community Assessments* | a. Participating in design, implementation, and interpretation of individual-level assessments (e.g., home environmental assessment) |
| 9. Conducting Outreach | a. Case-finding/recruitment of individuals, families, and community groups to services and systems |
| 10. Participating in Evaluation and Research | a. Engaging in evaluating CHW services and programs |
| B) Community Health Worker Competencies: Skills | |
|---|---|
Skill: The ability, coming from one’s knowledge, practice, and aptitude, to do something well. A core role or a task that must be performed may be supported by multiple skills. |
|
| 1. Communication Skills | a. Ability to use language confidently |
| 2. Interpersonal and Relationship-Building Skills | a. Ability to provide coaching and social support |
| 3. Service Coordination and Navigation Skills | a. Ability to coordinate care (including identifying and accessing resources and overcoming barriers) |
| 4. Capacity Building Skills | a. Ability to help others identify goals and develop to their fullest potential |
| 5. Advocacy Skills | a. Ability to contribute to policy development |
| 6. Education and Facilitation Skills | a. Ability to use empowering and learner-centered teaching strategies f. Ability to find and share requested information |
| 7. Individual and Community Assessment Skills | a. Ability to participate in individual assessment through observation and active inquiry |
| 8. Outreach Skills | a. Ability to conduct case-finding, recruitment and follow-up |
| 9. Professional Skills and Conduct | a. Ability to set goals and to develop and follow a work plan |
| 10. Evaluation and Research Skills | a. Ability to identify important concerns and conduct evaluation and research to better understand root causes |
| 11. Knowledge Base | a. Knowledge about social determinants of health and related disparities e. Knowledge about health behavior theories |