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Ghana’s CHPS Initiative Ghana Health Service With USAID support Jane Wickstrom Sr. Technical Advisor for Reproductive Health USAID/Ghana June 2002
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Outline of presentation n What is the Community-based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) Initiative n Where are we now? n The way forward
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Background Government’s desire to improve health status of Ghanaians Poor performance of health sector over the years Recognition of the need for a change in health delivery strategy
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CHPS At A Glance n National strategy for extending access to basic health services n Initiative based on research evidence from Navrongo Health Research Center (1994) n Nation-wide implementation begun in 2001
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Navrongo in NE Ghana
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Navrongo Experiment assessed the demographic impact of convenient community health and FP services on fertility tested the hypothesis that changes in service delivery can induce and sustain reproductive change
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Navrongo Findings: n Community health improves with both nurse relocation and social mobilization n The result is a fertility decline of one birth in the marital TFR in 3 years
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Communities Truly Involved
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CHPS At A Glance n Community Health Committees, Volunteers and Mobilization of community leaders n Community-based Health Officer deployed to the periphery and is mobile!
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CHPS At A Glance (con’t) n Resource Package: Transport, Community Health Compound (housing), and means of communication n Defined service package based on National Treatment Guidelines n Defined catchment area
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CHPS differs since it Deploys CHO to the community
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Home visits instead of static clinics Heading out for service delivery
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Volunteers, TBAs and Councils CHO and volunteers work together
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Community Leaders Committed Traditional leaders attend a community durbar
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Political Leaders Committed Central and district levels must be involved
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“Ghanaian Initiative Run by Ghanaians” n Director General’s Initiative n Director PPME runs M&E n Regional Directors manage TA n District Directors mobilize health staff n Sub-district supervises CHO
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Technical and Financial Support from USAID and DANIDA n JHU/PCS - community mobilization n PRIME II - train CHOs n EngenderHealth - counseling n Population Council - M&E n Donors – transport, communications, some equipment
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Integrated Services is the Key n Communities want full range of services: –Maternal care –Child health –Health education –Family Planning –Minor Injuries
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For Safe Motherhood n Communities want CHO to: –Monitor pregnant women –Provide simple ante-natal care (nutrition counseling, malaria prevention, etc.) –Map out delivery plan –Assist TBAs, deliver (if a midwife) or refer –Post-partum follow-up
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Communities & Safe Motherhood CHPS communities support CHO to: n arrange or conduct clean deliveries n recognize complications n arrange transportation n Help establish community fund for health emergencies and transport
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National Scope of CHPS The Lead District Approach
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Districts Starting CHPS Dec. 31, 2000 Dec. 31, 2001
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Quarterly reporting form Database Two-way Information sharing (CD-ROM) CHPS website: www.ghana-chps.org CHPS M&E Secretariat
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Continued Research, Monitoring and Evaluation Lead District Assessment (2001) “Strategic Assessment Method” Rapid Survey Method (RSM). MIS Mobilization CHPS cost analysis.
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Lead District Assessment n Results from Year One
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Successes to date n Increased awareness of health services and healthy behaviors n Services closer to people and people seeking care earlier n Construction of CHCs; formation of VHCs and volunteer services n Starting to obtain District Assembly support
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Constraints to date n Lack of support materials for CHOs, volunteers and committees n Lack of housing for CHOs and visiting supervisors n Lack of human resources to meet demand; lack of training for volunteers n Lack of motivation/incentives for CHOs
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20 Lead Districts using CHPS n 94% selected communities n 54% have CHOs assigned n 56% receive support from District Assembly n 75% believe resources are not adequate to enable CHOs to perform
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District Health Managers aware of CHPS
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District Assemblies know CHPS
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Community awareness of CHPS
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CHOs Want More Training in:
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The Way Forward n We are all in this boat together!
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The Way Forward n Need clear priorities, indicators and targets for success n Health Leadership and Supervisors must facilitate organizational support n CHOs need clear career path and incentives to relocate to periphery
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The Way Forward n Comprehensive training strategy needed, in-service and pre-service n Resource mobilization key (Districts Assemblies, MOH, Common Basket, donors) n Improve flow of finances to regions and districts
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The Way Forward Innovations and Monitoring Continue n Radio Distance Learning n Community Decision Making System n Use CHEST Kit, Journey of Hope and Life Choices IEC materials for education n Refine M&E system
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Learn from Navrongo Training Site for CHOs Community Entry and Mobilization training Link Theory and Practice in community health service delivery
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Learn from Navrongo Demystify CHPS Learn about variations on CHPS implementation Teach Districts to document their own stories Develop dissemination materials –“What works, What fails” –Videos
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Next steps USAID support for training, M&E, and transport/equipment Continue monitoring results of CHPS to assess impact Disseminate results within Ghana and internationally
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Thank You !
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