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Published byJuliet Leonard Modified over 9 years ago
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Medical Abortion Training in Asia: Innovative Approaches Case studies from Ipas’s experience Phan Bich Thuy, MD, MPH Protecting women ’ s health Advancing women ’ s reproductive rights
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What makes MA services different? Medical abortion is a process like a miscarriage that women experience over several hours /days and often outside of the clinic setting Different needs for training
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Training includes… Clinical sites /Providers MA service Women in need Community Clinical training Experience sharing Peer education IEC materials Women group’ activities Street dramas IEC materials
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Who are trainees/audiences? Doctors Midwives Nurses Auxiliary nurse, midwives Counselors Administrators Community intermediaries People in the community
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Nepal Train Female Community Health Volunteers Conduct pregnancy tests - early pregnancy detection Refer to prenatal care or safe abortion sites Provide family planning counseling Distribute condoms /contraceptive pills
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Vietnam Women Clubs’ activities Provision of MA information Questions & answers Role playing Poems/songs Visits to clinical sites
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India Street drama Acting troupe went to small villages and enacted skits or short dramas Experts in medical abortion helped to develop the script. IEC materials Inform woman about safe abortion
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Clinical Training Vietnam, Nepal, India & Cambodia Whole site training First, train a small group of providers Trained providers go back to their sites and train everyone Person who answers the phone is the one who first answers the patient’s questions - needs to be trained
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Clinical Training (cont.) Practice Observe medical abortion counseling on client’s first visit, second visit, and follow-up visit Observe expulsion phase of medical abortion Learn about patients’ experiences with MA
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Clinical Training (cont.) Training methods Case studies Group work Debates Role playing Observation Practice on real patients Values clarification Blended learning
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Training Follow-up Mentoring new providers Quality of care monitoring using measurable monitoring tool Experience-sharing meeting with providers Sending providers updated research
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Lessons learned Educate both sides: providers & women/people at community Use different training methods & content based on training purposes & background of trainees/audiences Use a comprehensive training model to ensure effective practices Share experiences: learn from each other Frequently update knowledge
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Lessons learned (cont.) Link training with: Drug availability Monitoring quality of care Managing changes at clinical sites IEC material development Community activities Policy changes
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Thank you!
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