Cargando…

Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India

OBJECTIVES: The Urban Health Initiative (UHI) was initiated in 2009 with the goal of increasing family planning (FP) use among the poor in urban areas of Uttar Pradesh, India. The Measurement, Learning & Evaluation project (MLE) was tasked with rigorous impact evaluation of the UHI. This paper p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Achyut, Pranita, Benson, Aimee, Calhoun, Lisa M., Corroon, Meghan, Guilkey, David K., Kebede, Essete, Lance, Peter M., Mishra, Anurag, Nanda, Priya, O'Hara, Rick, Sengupta, Ranajit, Speizer, Ilene S., Stewart, John F., Winston, Jennifer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4863519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26948185
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2016.02.031
_version_ 1782431491249143808
author Achyut, Pranita
Benson, Aimee
Calhoun, Lisa M.
Corroon, Meghan
Guilkey, David K.
Kebede, Essete
Lance, Peter M.
Mishra, Anurag
Nanda, Priya
O'Hara, Rick
Sengupta, Ranajit
Speizer, Ilene S.
Stewart, John F.
Winston, Jennifer
author_facet Achyut, Pranita
Benson, Aimee
Calhoun, Lisa M.
Corroon, Meghan
Guilkey, David K.
Kebede, Essete
Lance, Peter M.
Mishra, Anurag
Nanda, Priya
O'Hara, Rick
Sengupta, Ranajit
Speizer, Ilene S.
Stewart, John F.
Winston, Jennifer
author_sort Achyut, Pranita
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: The Urban Health Initiative (UHI) was initiated in 2009 with the goal of increasing family planning (FP) use among the poor in urban areas of Uttar Pradesh, India. The Measurement, Learning & Evaluation project (MLE) was tasked with rigorous impact evaluation of the UHI. This paper presents the impact evaluation findings of the UHI program. STUDY DESIGN: The MLE design includes a longitudinal sample of women and health facilities with baseline (2010) and endline (2014) data collection in six cities in Uttar Pradesh, India. At baseline, samples representative of women in each city were selected with oversampling of the poor. Eighty-four percent of women interviewed at baseline were reinterviewed 4 years later at endline. The longitudinal data support a within/fixed-effects approach to identification of program impact on changes in modern FP use. RESULTS: Impact evaluation results show significant effects of exposure to both demand and supply side program activities. In particular, women exposed to brochures (marginal effect: 6.96, p < .001), billboards/posters/wall hangings (marginal effect: 2.09, p < .05), and FP on the television (marginal effect: 2.46, p < .001) were significantly more likely to be using a modern method at endline. In addition, we found borderline significance for being exposed to a community health worker (marginal effect: 1.66, p < .10) and living close to an improved public and private supply environment where UHI undertook activities (marginal effects and p values: 2.48, p < .05 and 1.56, p < .10, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: UHI program activities were designed to complement the Government of India's strategies aimed at ensuring access to and provision of FP to urban poor populations. The effective demand- and supply-side strategies of the UHI program are therefore likely to be sustainable and scalable to other urban areas in India. IMPLICATIONS STATEMENT: Findings from this study are important for designing sustainable and scalable FP strategies for urban India where increases in FP use will be relevant for meeting international FP targets.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4863519
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-48635192016-06-01 Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India Achyut, Pranita Benson, Aimee Calhoun, Lisa M. Corroon, Meghan Guilkey, David K. Kebede, Essete Lance, Peter M. Mishra, Anurag Nanda, Priya O'Hara, Rick Sengupta, Ranajit Speizer, Ilene S. Stewart, John F. Winston, Jennifer Contraception Original Research Article OBJECTIVES: The Urban Health Initiative (UHI) was initiated in 2009 with the goal of increasing family planning (FP) use among the poor in urban areas of Uttar Pradesh, India. The Measurement, Learning & Evaluation project (MLE) was tasked with rigorous impact evaluation of the UHI. This paper presents the impact evaluation findings of the UHI program. STUDY DESIGN: The MLE design includes a longitudinal sample of women and health facilities with baseline (2010) and endline (2014) data collection in six cities in Uttar Pradesh, India. At baseline, samples representative of women in each city were selected with oversampling of the poor. Eighty-four percent of women interviewed at baseline were reinterviewed 4 years later at endline. The longitudinal data support a within/fixed-effects approach to identification of program impact on changes in modern FP use. RESULTS: Impact evaluation results show significant effects of exposure to both demand and supply side program activities. In particular, women exposed to brochures (marginal effect: 6.96, p < .001), billboards/posters/wall hangings (marginal effect: 2.09, p < .05), and FP on the television (marginal effect: 2.46, p < .001) were significantly more likely to be using a modern method at endline. In addition, we found borderline significance for being exposed to a community health worker (marginal effect: 1.66, p < .10) and living close to an improved public and private supply environment where UHI undertook activities (marginal effects and p values: 2.48, p < .05 and 1.56, p < .10, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: UHI program activities were designed to complement the Government of India's strategies aimed at ensuring access to and provision of FP to urban poor populations. The effective demand- and supply-side strategies of the UHI program are therefore likely to be sustainable and scalable to other urban areas in India. IMPLICATIONS STATEMENT: Findings from this study are important for designing sustainable and scalable FP strategies for urban India where increases in FP use will be relevant for meeting international FP targets. Elsevier 2016-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4863519/ /pubmed/26948185 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2016.02.031 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research Article
Achyut, Pranita
Benson, Aimee
Calhoun, Lisa M.
Corroon, Meghan
Guilkey, David K.
Kebede, Essete
Lance, Peter M.
Mishra, Anurag
Nanda, Priya
O'Hara, Rick
Sengupta, Ranajit
Speizer, Ilene S.
Stewart, John F.
Winston, Jennifer
Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India
title Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India
title_full Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India
title_fullStr Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India
title_full_unstemmed Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India
title_short Impact evaluation of the Urban Health Initiative in urban Uttar Pradesh, India
title_sort impact evaluation of the urban health initiative in urban uttar pradesh, india
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4863519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26948185
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2016.02.031
work_keys_str_mv AT achyutpranita impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT bensonaimee impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT calhounlisam impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT corroonmeghan impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT guilkeydavidk impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT kebedeessete impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT lancepeterm impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT mishraanurag impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT nandapriya impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT ohararick impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT senguptaranajit impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT speizerilenes impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT stewartjohnf impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia
AT winstonjennifer impactevaluationoftheurbanhealthinitiativeinurbanuttarpradeshindia