Capacity-Building Through Digital Approaches: Evaluating the Feasibility and Effectiveness of eLearning to Introduce Subcutaneous DMPA Self-Injection in Senegal and Uganda.

Autor: Wood S; PATH, Seattle, WA, USA. swood@path.org., Roberts E; PATH, Seattle, WA, USA., Stout AA; PATH, Seattle, WA, USA., Kaboré A; PATH, Dakar, Senegal., Namagembe A; PATH, Kampala, Uganda., Cover J; PATH, Seattle, WA, USA., Ndiaye MD; Formerly of the Ministry of Health and Social Action, Dakar, Senegal., Diokh M; PATH, Dakar, Senegal., Sèye F; PATH, Dakar, Senegal., Balderston B; PATH, Seattle, WA, USA.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Global health, science and practice [Glob Health Sci Pract] 2024 Oct 29; Vol. 12 (5). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Oct 29 (Print Publication: 2024).
DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-24-00019
Abstrakt: Training health workers is one of the biggest challenges and cost drivers when introducing a new contraceptive method or service delivery innovation. PATH developed a digital training curriculum for family planning providers who are learning to offer subcutaneous DMPA (DMPA-SC), including through self-injection, as an option among a range of contraceptive methods. The DMPA-SC eLearning course for health workers includes 10 lessons with an emphasis on informed choice counseling and training clients to self-inject. In partnership with Ministries of Health in Senegal and Uganda, the course was rolled out in select areas in 2019-2020, including during the COVID-19 pandemic when physical distancing requirements restricted in-person training. We conducted evaluations in both countries to assess the practical application of this digital training approach for contraceptive introduction. The evaluation consisted of a post-training survey, an observational assessment conducted during post-training supportive supervision, and an estimation of training costs.In both countries, a majority (88.6% in Uganda and 64.3% in Senegal) scored above 80% on a DMPA-SC knowledge test following the training. In Senegal, where there was a comparison group of providers trained in person, those providers scored similar on the post-test to eLearners. Providers in both groups and in both countries felt more prepared to administer DMPA-SC or offer self-injection to clients after receiving a supervision visit (93%-98% of eLearners felt very prepared after supervision as compared to 45%-72% prior). The evaluation results suggest that digital approaches offer a number of benefits, can be cost-effective, and are most optimal when blended with in-person training and/or supportive supervision.
(© Wood et al.)
Databáze: MEDLINE