Ormel Hermen, Oele George, Kok Maryse, Oruko Happiness, Oluoch Beatrice, Smet Eefje, Indalo Dorcus
KIT Royal Tropical Institute, P.O. Box 95001, 1090, HA, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Amref Health Africa, P.O. Box 30125, 00100 , Wilson Airport, Nairobi, Kenya.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 May 1;21(1):405. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-06363-x.
Access to contraceptive services is a cornerstone of human well-being. While Community Health Volunteers (CHVs) promote family planning in Kenya, the unmet need for contraceptives among youth remains high. CHVs seem to pay little specific attention to the contraceptive needs of the youth.
We conducted a qualitative study exploring the role of CHVs in increasing access and uptake of contraceptive services among youth aged 18-24 years in Narok and Homabay Counties, Kenya. We undertook 37 interviews and 15 focus group discussions involving CHVs, youth, community members, community leaders, youth leaders and health programme managers. Data were recorded, transcribed, translated, coded and thematically analysed, according to a framework that included community, CHV and health system-related factors.
CHVs often operated in traditional contexts that challenge contraceptive use among unmarried female and male youth and young married couples. Yet many CHVs seemed to have overcome this potential 'barrier' as well as reigning misconceptions about contraceptives. While private and facility-based public contraceptive services were somehow available, CHVs were the preferred service provider for many youth due to ease of access and saving time and transport costs. This was influenced by varied perceptions among youth of CHVs' knowledge, skills and attitudes regarding contraceptives and provider-client interaction, and specifically their commitment to maintain confidentiality.
CHVs have the potential to increase access to contraceptives for young people, reducing unmet need for contraceptives. Their knowledge, skills and attitudes need strengthening through training and supervision, while incentives to motivate them and broadening the range of contraceptives they are allowed to offer should be considered.
获得避孕服务是人类福祉的基石。虽然社区卫生志愿者(CHV)在肯尼亚推广计划生育,但青年人群中未满足的避孕需求仍然很高。CHV似乎很少特别关注青年的避孕需求。
我们进行了一项定性研究,探讨CHV在肯尼亚纳罗克县和霍马贝县18 - 24岁青年中增加避孕服务可及性和使用率方面的作用。我们进行了37次访谈和15次焦点小组讨论,涉及CHV、青年、社区成员、社区领袖、青年领袖和卫生项目管理人员。根据一个包括社区、CHV和卫生系统相关因素的框架,对数据进行记录、转录、翻译、编码和主题分析。
CHV通常在传统环境中开展工作,这对未婚青年男女和年轻已婚夫妇使用避孕措施构成挑战。然而,许多CHV似乎已经克服了这一潜在“障碍”以及对避孕措施的普遍误解。虽然私立和基于医疗机构的公共避孕服务在一定程度上是可获得的,但由于易于获得且节省时间和交通成本,CHV是许多青年首选的服务提供者。这受到青年对CHV在避孕知识、技能和态度以及医患互动方面的不同看法的影响,特别是他们对保密的承诺。
CHV有潜力增加年轻人获得避孕措施的机会,减少未满足的避孕需求。需要通过培训和监督来加强他们的知识、技能和态度,同时应考虑激励措施以激励他们,并扩大他们被允许提供的避孕措施范围。