Mentoring, Task Sharing, and Community Outreach Through the TutoratPlus Approach: Increasing Use of Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptives in Senegal
Autor: | Etienne Dioh, Boniface Sebikali, Carol Cissé, Jennifer Wesson, Claire I. Viadro, Djimadoum Koumtingue, Bocar Mamadou Daff, Hawa Talla, Babacar Gueye, Sara Stratton |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Rural Population Work Adolescent Service delivery framework Health Personnel education Long-acting reversible contraception Context (language use) Health Services Accessibility Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Nursing Contraceptive Agents Female Humans Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Contraception Behavior Drug Implants Long-Acting Reversible Contraception 030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine Community engagement business.industry Mentoring General Medicine Quality Improvement Community-Institutional Relations Senegal Checklist Outreach Family planning Family Planning Services Female Original Article Clinical Competence Health Facilities Rural area business Intrauterine Devices |
Zdroj: | Global Health: Science and Practice |
ISSN: | 2169-575X |
DOI: | 10.9745/ghsp-d-15-00328 |
Popis: | Mentoring, task sharing, and community outreach at 100 rural facilities in Senegal led to an 86% increase over 6 months in the number of women choosing long-acting reversible contraceptives (from 1,552 to 2,879). Concurrent improvement of facilities and provider skills, coupled with the application of Senegal’s task-sharing policy, are increasing the range of contraceptive methods available to women throughout the country. Background: To broaden access to family planning in rural areas and improve contraceptive prevalence, Senegal, in the context of wide method choice, is promoting implants and the intrauterine device, currently used throughout the country by only 5.6% of women of reproductive age who are in union, primarily urban women. Methods: The TutoratPlus performance improvement approach strengthens family planning clinical skills, particularly for long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), through mentoring, task sharing, and community outreach. Following a 2013 baseline situation analysis, 290 participating facilities in 12 of Senegal's 14 regions developed action plans to address gaps identified in 3 areas: provider performance, equipment, and infrastructure. Between 2013 and 2014, 85 trained mentors coached, demonstrated skills, and observed 857 providers, including nurses, nonclinical family planning counselors, and community health workers (CHWs), in LARC service provision through two 5-day visits per facility at 21-day intervals. We used routine service delivery data and TutoratPlus mentoring data to assess changes in contraceptive use, including LARCs, 6 months before and 6 months after the mentoring intervention among 100 of the facilities with complete data. Results: The baseline assessment of 290 facilities found that fewer than half (47%) had a provider who could offer at least 1 LARC method, and 64% to 69% lacked kits. Post-intervention, all 290 facilities were adequately equipped and clinically able to offer LARCs. Among the 552 clinical providers, the percentage with acceptable LARC performance (at least 80% of observation checklist items correct) doubled from 32% to 67% over the 2 mentoring visits. In the 100 facilities with available comparison data, the number of new LARC users rose from 1,552 to 2,879 in the 6 months pre- and post-intervention—an 86% increase. Conclusion: Success of the TutoratPlus approach in Senegal is likely in part attributable to addressing facility-specific needs, using on-site mentoring to assess provider capacity, and achieving workplace enhancements through community engagement. Without CHW-initiated community outreach, LARC uptake might have been lower. Although task sharing requires institutionalization within national health systems, TutoratPlus demonstrates that provider skills can be improved, facilities can be better equipped, and demand can be promoted using existing government and community resources. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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