Certified Community Health Worker (CCHW)

NV CHW Competencies

  • Connect clients with the right health care.
  • Involve the community in clients’ issues by promoting causes and using existing resources.
  • Educate community members, legislators, the media and other professionals or organizations about clients’ issues.
  • Use social media as an advocacy platform.
  • Build and strengthen communities.
  • Educate community members about programs and services that benefit them using community outreach.
  • Understand various populations and how to communicate with them.
  • Understand the needs of different populations.
  • Learn to build collaborative relationships with colleagues and partners.
  • Learn about the different ways we communicate, including verbally and non-verbally.
  • Use active and empathetic communication skills.
  • Look out for and overcome barriers to communication.
  • Be a clearer communicator, both when speaking and when writing.
  • Connect clients to resources in their language, including medical interpreters and translated documents.
  • Inform clients about the benefits of healthy eating and physical activity.
  • Help clients manage or even avoid chronic illness by adopting healthy lifestyle. habits.
  • Improve health outcomes.
  • Strengthen community linkages.
  • Overcome barriers to healthy choices in environments, including food insecurity and other limitations.
  • Understand the role culture plays in a person’s health, including behaviors, language, customs, beliefs, and perspectives.
  • Learn culturally appropriate and respectful ways of communicating.
  • Use empathy to connect with people who come from various backgrounds.
  • Deliver health care services that meet the social, cultural, and linguistic needs of patients to avoid health disparities.
  • Build relationships with partners and colleagues to deliver culturally and linguistically appropriate services.
  • Improve collaboration among team members.
  • Appreciate the importance of support roles in case management.
  • Learn to leverage community resources in patient care.
  • Become an effective liaison with sources outside the community.
  • Effectively manage cases from first instance to follow-up.
  • Develop a keen understanding of contextual factors in assessing individuals within your community.
  • Discover formal assessment methods to get actively involved in community initiatives.
  • Feel confident designing, implementing, and interpreting individual assessments, including home evaluations.
  • Learn to design, implement, and interpret community-wide assessments and initiatives.
  • Help teams channel define unique needs within the community.
  • Understand the local health insurance landscape.
  • Help patients successfully navigate the intricacies of health insurance.
  • Connect community members with the resources that best serve their needs and the key role preventive services play in long-term health.
  • Provide accurate information about the types of insurance and the medical services available to the community, as well as potential costs.
  • Inform the legal and technical aspects of the healthcare industry.

 

  • Improve the ability to break complex topics into manageable information.
  • Collect pertinent health information from and for community members
  • Plan and conduct health classes for varied audiences.
  • Use cultural context to bring accurate, relevant information to community members.
  • Measure community members’ understanding in key health issues to help predict outcomes.
  • Organize schedules, shifts, and reporting on team members and priorities to maintain clear communication with supervisors or the work team.
  • Plan goals for individuals and the organization, taking priorities, budget, and other aspects into account.
  • Establish a safe space for coworkers with open, clear communication.
  • Take charge of event organization, both internal and external (workshops, outreach efforts, educational presentations, and more).
  • Oversee project development and ensure that priorities and objectives are being met.
  • Help team and community members explore their capacities.
  • Empower the community to make conscious choices.
  • Build connections, support, and allyship within communities.
  • Help individuals advocate for themselves through empowerment and education.
  • Lead community initiatives confidently, as well as identify local leaders and provide them with support.
  • Learn to manage time, resources, and priorities on an individual basis while balancing stressors.
  • Assess situations and determine risk factors and potential solutions.
  • Utilize the available resources to their best potential, including technology, assessment tools, and more.
  • Adhere to ethical and standards including codes of ethics, laws, bills, and other institutional guidelines.
  • Assume professional education and self-improvement as a pillar for personal development.
  • Develop a deep understanding of the public health structure.
  • Understand the role and responsibilities that fall on CHW’s shoulders as frontline health workers.
  • Identify challenges and opportunities in communities by addressing the four pillars of public health.
  • Combine theoretical knowledge and culturally relevant experience to understand public health on a local scale.
  • Dive into the complex nature and root causes of some of today’s biggest health challenges, and explore how these affect healthcare services and populations.

 

Adapted from the CHW Core Competencies of the American Public Health Association, the National Community Health Association, Texas, and Massachusetts