overview of community engagement for maternal health services ethiopian experience tadesse ketema...
TRANSCRIPT
Overview of COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
FOR MATERNAL HEALTH SERVICES
ETHIOPIAN EXPERIENCETadesse Ketema MD,MPH
Maternal Child Health Advisor ,MOH
1. – CONTEXTIn Ethiopia 83.6 % lives in rural areas, and has
high level of pregnancy as well as maternal and child morbidity and mortality including MTCT
On the other hand most health care facilities were concentrated in urban areas
To address this challenge the Government has designed and implemented the health extension program since 2005.
1.1 The Government targets for 2015 Of PMTCT Provide ANC services to 90 % of pregnant women
Ensure all women are attended at delivery (62% by skilled attendant and 38% by HEWs)
Provide ARV prophylaxis to 90% of HIV positive pregnant women
Reduce national incidence of HIV infection by 50%
1.2 The major challenges to PMTCT to be addressed
Limited expansion of PMTCT services;Inadequate use of PMTCT service where it is
availableLimited access to and utilization of early infant
diagnosis low percentage of deliveries attended at health
institutionsAttitude of health workers Weak community-health facility referral linkages Poor male partner involvement Slow roll out of HMIS and poor recording and
reporting practices
1.3 Rationale for community engagement need for MNCH/ PMTCT
In 2003 EFY (July 2010 to June 2011), 82% of women accessed ANC services at least once
As of July 2011, PMTCT services were available in health facilities where only 54% of women attended for ANC.
This calls for expansion of PMTCT services to avail it to all women who have contact with the health service for ANC.
2007 2008 2009 20100
100000200000300000400000500000600000700000800000900000
ANC attendantsCounseled for PMTCTTested for HIV
NB:The ANC coverage report on the graph Source :Hapco Report ,June 2010
2007 2008 2009 20100
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
14000
HIV positive identified Mothers Received ARV Babies received ARV
Rationale for community engagement cnd...Of women who attended ANC clinics at health
facilities that are providing PMTCT services in 2003 EFY (2010/2011), more than 300, 000 of them (25%) were not tested
ARV prophylaxis was provided for 8365 (40%) of women identified as HIV + at these facilities
4945 (24%) of their new-borns has got ARVThere is a 23% drop out from counselling to
testing and 60% from identification to provision of ARV prophylaxis to HIV positive pregnant women
Rationale for community engagement contd...These missed opportunities can be avoided with
improved through engaging community and improving quality of care provided to retain women in PMTCT services including
linkage to community systems to initiate services and track cases lost to follow up
close monitoring of these activities local data utilization for timely identification of gaps
2. Health Extension Program 2.1. General Objective:Improving the health of the population through
disease prevention focused expansion, and family and community centered equitable health services
2.2. Specific Objectives:To enable community members to take greater
responsibility for their health, have better decision‐making on health issues, and improve and maintain their own health;
Enhancing community consciousness in strengthening disease prevention activities and improving health outcomes;
3.Effective community engagement Health Extension and Development ArmyA health post built in each kebele through
community participation, to serve an average of 5,000 people in family and community focused disease prevention and health promotion services.
A health center is also organized to support a cluster of five health posts; it serves approximately 25,000 people on average.
Around 30 thousand HEWS trained and deployed in around 15,000 health posts
HEWS are tenth grade complete and trained for a year on 16 packages of the health extension program
One health post is staffed with two health extension workers who are all females
Progress has been registered in reducing under five child mortality rate, increasing number and use of latrines, increasing family planning and vaccination coverage as well as significant decline in death and disabilities due to malaria
ANC coverage is tripled and reach to 82% since 2005 and FP utilization has also shown a dramatic improvement
Level of Intervention
Priority Activity
Household Households with pregnant women; mothers who delivered recently and infants; Households with persons having chronic health problems; and Households with satisfactory result in implementing the health extension packages.
Family planning, antenatal care, postnatal care and immunization services;Provision of basic health care services during household visits;
Community Conveying health education and Health services at the community level;Health extension workers will deliver services to members of the community in outreach program via a cluster of gotts/sub village;
In delivering the health extension program packages it is essential to use community social networks (Idir, Ekub, etc), Associations (women’s, youth and farmers associations), religious institutions and Government structures (for example agricultural development stations).
Institutional Level In delivering the health extension program packages it is essential to use community social networks (Idir, Ekub, etc), Associations (women’s, youth and farmers associations), religious institutions and Government structures (for example agricultural development stations).
Deliver health education and services at youth centers; Make schools models of implementation of the health extension packages and educate students; andOrganize or use existing clubs in the school to train students on important health issues;
Level Activity
Health Post Provide integrated community case management (ICCM) for childhood illnesses;
Control and register the temperature for vaccine/maintain cold chains;
Give vaccination services; Provide family planning services; Provide ante‐natal and post natal care; Identify children, pregnant and breast feeding mothers with
nutritional deficiencies and give nutritional counseling; Follow‐up, supportive supervision and assessment/evaluation of
quality and transparency of the activities being implemented by the one‐to‐five networks;
Prioritizing households with low performance in implementing the package and support them in all the health extension packages that are relevant to them;
Providing health education; and Support and encourage model households to maintain their
progress. Organization, follow up, supportive supervision and evaluation of the
one‐to‐five networks and Development teams; and Organize and conduct regular meetings every two weeks to evaluate
the performance of the Development teams.
Model Family Training
Model Household Training is a training program conducted by the health extension workers and leaders of one‐to‐five networks on all health extension packages
4. The Role of the MoH in Supporting The Program Strengthening primary health care unit (PHCU); Preparing guidelines and other essential
documents/materials that support the health extension program and ensure its proper implementation;
Strengthening collaboration and improving communication among different sector ministries at the federal level, Regional Councils, Regional Health Bureaus as well as development partners for the successful implementation of the health extension program;
Close follow up and encourage the sharing of information in promoting collaboration and networking;
Evaluate the implementation of the programAcknowledge and reward those health extension
workers for their outstanding performanceDesign and implement integrated supportive
supervision activities;Develop standards for the in‐service integrated
refresher training, further education, career development structure for the health extension workers and closely follow‐up for its implementation;
5.Challenges and Recommendations to the program Challenge Strategies for Overcoming
BarriersThe health extension program performance and impact did not have the expected high velocity and quality since it was managed in a campaign form, and lacked the strategic leadership required to coordinate and organize community level activities
Establish and use the health development armyStrengthen referral linkage andStrengthen urban HEW implementation
The health extension workers alone may not be sufficient to implementing all the packages in the health extension program. Hence, it appeared to be essential to organize community members in development teams and in one‐to‐five networks
Weak Referral linkage as the rural Health extension workers are not mandated to do T & C but link for one ANC visit to Health Center
Organizing community members in health development army empowers the community in making decisions and owning the program.
This situation in turn accelerates the implementation of the program and improves the health of the community in a short period of time.
Strengthen the referral linkage within the PHCU
Thank you