Dalaba Maxwell Ayindenaba, Stone Allison E, Krumholz Abigail R, Oduro Abraham R, Phillips James F, Adongo Philip B
Navrongo Health Research Centre, P.O.Box 114, Navrongo, Upper East Region, Ghana.
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, Heilbrunn Department of Population and Family Health, 60 Haven Ave. B-2, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Mar 5;16:80. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1325-6.
In 2000, Ghana launched the Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) initiative to improve access to health and family planning services. This initiative was based in part on research, known as the Navrongo Project, conducted in the Kassena-Nankana district (KND) between 1994 to 2003 which demonstrated significant impact on fertility and child mortality. This paper examines current contraceptive perceptions in communities that were exposed to the Project's service models over the 1994 to 2003 period, and the post-experimental policies of the CHPS era.
Qualitative study was conducted in the KND of Ghana from June to September, 2012, by convening 8 male and 8 female FGD panels as well as 8 in-depth interviews of community leaders. Data collection was stratified by original experimental cell of the Navrongo Project to permit appraisal of social effects of contrasting experimental conditions. Inductive content analysis was performed with QSR Nvivo 10 to identify predominant themes.
While findings show that exposure to community-based services was associated with enhanced approval of birth spacing and limitation, this view is grounded in perceptions that childhood survival has improved. Nonetheless, concerns were expressed about contraceptive side effects, prominently permanent sterility. Strategies for male outreach and community engagement originally introduced during the Navrongo Project have not been sustained with CHPS scale-up. The apparent atrophy of attention to the needs of men may explain the resistance of some males to the notion of female reproductive autonomy and the practice of some women to adopt contraception in secret. Despite this apparent programmatic dearth of male engagement, there is evidence to suggest that social impact of the original male engagement strategy persists in communities where male mobilization was combined with doorstep provision of family planning care during the Navrongo Project.
Community-based services fostered attitudinal change towards family planning in a traditional sub-Saharan African setting. Sustained exposure to primary health care that have improved the survival of children has made the use of contraception more acceptable. Efforts should be embedded in primary health care programmes that address concerns about child survival while also consigning sustained priority to the information needs of men.
2000年,加纳发起了基于社区的健康规划与服务(CHPS)倡议,以改善获得卫生和计划生育服务的机会。该倡议部分基于1994年至2003年在卡塞纳-南卡纳区(KND)开展的一项名为纳夫龙戈项目的研究,该研究表明对生育率和儿童死亡率有显著影响。本文研究了在1994年至2003年期间接触该项目服务模式的社区中当前的避孕观念,以及CHPS时代的实验后政策。
2012年6月至9月在加纳的KND进行了定性研究,召集了8个男性和8个女性焦点小组讨论,并对社区领袖进行了8次深入访谈。数据收集按纳夫龙戈项目的原始实验单元进行分层,以便评估不同实验条件的社会影响。使用QSR Nvivo 10进行归纳性内容分析,以确定主要主题。
虽然研究结果表明接触基于社区的服务与对生育间隔和限制的认可度提高有关,但这种观点基于儿童存活率有所提高的认知。尽管如此,人们对避孕副作用,尤其是永久性不育表示担忧。纳夫龙戈项目最初引入的男性外展和社区参与策略在CHPS扩大规模后并未持续下去。对男性需求关注的明显减少可能解释了一些男性对女性生殖自主权概念的抵制以及一些女性秘密采取避孕措施的行为。尽管在项目实施中明显缺乏对男性参与的关注,但有证据表明,在纳夫龙戈项目期间,男性动员与在门口提供计划生育护理相结合的社区中,最初的男性参与策略的社会影响仍然存在。
在撒哈拉以南非洲的传统环境中,基于社区的服务促进了对计划生育态度的转变。持续接触改善了儿童存活率的初级卫生保健使避孕措施的使用更容易被接受。应将努力纳入初级卫生保健计划,该计划既要解决对儿童存活率的担忧,同时也要持续优先考虑男性的信息需求。