Reproductive, Maternal Health and Ageing Team, World Health Organization, Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo.
Department of Community Medicine, Research and Innovation Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Burundi, Bujumbura, Burundi.
Reprod Health. 2021 Jan 23;18(1):22. doi: 10.1186/s12978-020-01038-y.
Expanding access and use of effective contraception is important in achieving universal access to reproductive healthcare services, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), such as those in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Shortage of trained healthcare providers is an important contributor to increased unmet need for contraception in SSA. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends task sharing as an important strategy to improve access to sexual and reproductive healthcare services by addressing shortage of healthcare providers. This study explores the status, successes, challenges and impacts of the implementation of task sharing for family planning in five SSA countries. This evidence is aimed at promoting the implementation and scale-up of task sharing programmes in SSA countries by WHO.
We employed a rapid programme review (RPR) methodology to generate evidence on task sharing for family planning programmes from five SSA countries namely, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, Ethiopia, Ghana, and Nigeria. This involved a desk review of country task sharing policy documents, implementation plans and guidelines, annual sexual and reproductive health programme reports, WHO regional meeting reports on task sharing for family planning; and information from key informants on country background, intervention packages, impact, enablers, challenges and ways forward on task sharing for family planning. The findings indicate mainly the involvement of community health workers, midwives and nurses in the task sharing programmes with training in provision of contraceptive pills and long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARC). Results indicate an increase in family planning indicators during the task shifting implementation period. For instance, injectable contraceptive use increased more than threefold within six months in Burkina Faso; contraceptive prevalence rate doubled with declines in total fertility and unmet need for contraception in Ethiopia; and uptake of LARC increased in Ghana and Nigeria. Some barriers to successful implementation include poor retention of lower cadre providers, inadequate documentation, and poor data systems.
Task sharing plays a role in increasing contraceptive uptake and holds promise in promoting universal access to family planning in the SSA region. Evidence from this RPR is helpful in elaborating country policies and scale-up of task sharing for family planning programmes.
扩大有效避孕措施的可及性和使用率对于实现生殖健康服务的普及至关重要,特别是在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)等中低收入国家(LMICs)。医疗保健提供者的短缺是导致 SSA 地区避孕需求未得到满足的重要因素。世界卫生组织(WHO)建议任务分担是一种重要策略,可以通过解决医疗保健提供者短缺的问题,来改善性和生殖健康服务的可及性。本研究探讨了在撒哈拉以南非洲的五个国家中实施计划生育任务分担的现状、成功经验、挑战和影响。该证据旨在通过世卫组织促进撒哈拉以南非洲国家实施和扩大任务分担计划。
我们采用快速方案审查(RPR)方法,从撒哈拉以南非洲的五个国家(布基纳法索、科特迪瓦、埃塞俄比亚、加纳和尼日利亚)生成关于计划生育任务分担的证据。这包括对国家任务分担政策文件、实施计划和指南、年度性和生殖健康方案报告、世卫组织关于计划生育任务分担的区域会议报告的案头审查;以及关于国家背景、干预措施包、影响、促进因素、挑战和计划生育任务分担前进方向的主要利益攸关方的信息。研究结果表明,主要有社区卫生工作者、助产士和护士参与任务分担计划,并接受了提供避孕药具和长效可逆避孕措施(LARC)的培训。结果表明,在任务转移实施期间,计划生育指标有所增加。例如,布基纳法索在六个月内注射避孕使用率增加了三倍多;埃塞俄比亚的避孕普及率增加了一倍,总生育率和避孕需求未得到满足的情况有所下降;加纳和尼日利亚的 LARC 使用率增加。成功实施的一些障碍包括低级别提供者的保留率低、记录不充分和数据系统不完善。
任务分担在增加避孕措施的使用方面发挥了作用,并有望在撒哈拉以南非洲地区促进计划生育的普及。本 RPR 的证据有助于制定国家政策和扩大计划生育任务分担计划。