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The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In 2018, the transition to routine vitamin A supplementation (VAS) was integrated with caregivers' preparation of nutritious complementary food from local produce and confidential counseling and provision of modern contraceptives. In 2019, funding for complementary food cea...

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Autores principales: Koroma, Aminata S., Kamara, Habib I., Moses, Francis, Bah, Mariama, Turay, Mohamed, Kandeh, Abdulai, Kandeh, Shekuba, Allieu, Henry, Kargbo, Anita, MaCauley, Anna, Hodges, Mary H., Doledec, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8238388/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34195385
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.297
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author Koroma, Aminata S.
Kamara, Habib I.
Moses, Francis
Bah, Mariama
Turay, Mohamed
Kandeh, Abdulai
Kandeh, Shekuba
Allieu, Henry
Kargbo, Anita
MaCauley, Anna
Hodges, Mary H.
Doledec, David
author_facet Koroma, Aminata S.
Kamara, Habib I.
Moses, Francis
Bah, Mariama
Turay, Mohamed
Kandeh, Abdulai
Kandeh, Shekuba
Allieu, Henry
Kargbo, Anita
MaCauley, Anna
Hodges, Mary H.
Doledec, David
author_sort Koroma, Aminata S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In 2018, the transition to routine vitamin A supplementation (VAS) was integrated with caregivers' preparation of nutritious complementary food from local produce and confidential counseling and provision of modern contraceptives. In 2019, funding for complementary food ceased and Community Health Workers (CHWs) were trained to track defaulters, while national efforts to improve Health Management Information Systems, supply chains and reduce teenage pregnancies were intensified. We report on key indicators after these changes and in comparison, to those previously published. METHODS: The same Lot Quality Assurance Sampling methodology was used in both assessments: 19 villages were randomly selected in each of five lots in each of three districts then caregivers of children 6‐59 months age randomly selected and interviewed. RESULTS: Coverage of VAS, Albendazole, and Pentavalent 3 before and after these changes was over 80%, 75%, and 80% respectively, equitable by sex, age, caregiver's religion, and educational status. Comparison with 2018 found more lots failed to reach 80% VAS by verbal affirmation (10 vs 2), and coverage in one district (Bo) had dropped (77.5% vs 92.3%). Fewer caregivers were aware that VAS should be taken every 6 months (27% vs 50%), that complementary feeding should start at 6 months (63% vs 77%) or were providing minimal dietary diversity (27% vs 45%). There was an increase in caregivers using modern contraception (45% vs 35%), obtaining information about contraception from a friend (14% vs 9%), while fewer thought country rope/herbs (traditional contraceptives) were “effective” (11% vs 21%) and stockouts of contraceptives at health facilities had dropped (24% vs 55%). Stipends for CHWs cost approximately $750 K vs complementary food: $112 K. CONCLUSION: Overall coverage for VAS, Albendazole, and Pentavalent remained effective but VAS had dropped significantly in one district. Complementary feeding practices had declined. Awareness, uptake, and contraceptives supply chains had improved.
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spelling pubmed-82383882021-06-29 The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019 Koroma, Aminata S. Kamara, Habib I. Moses, Francis Bah, Mariama Turay, Mohamed Kandeh, Abdulai Kandeh, Shekuba Allieu, Henry Kargbo, Anita MaCauley, Anna Hodges, Mary H. Doledec, David Health Sci Rep Research Articles BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In 2018, the transition to routine vitamin A supplementation (VAS) was integrated with caregivers' preparation of nutritious complementary food from local produce and confidential counseling and provision of modern contraceptives. In 2019, funding for complementary food ceased and Community Health Workers (CHWs) were trained to track defaulters, while national efforts to improve Health Management Information Systems, supply chains and reduce teenage pregnancies were intensified. We report on key indicators after these changes and in comparison, to those previously published. METHODS: The same Lot Quality Assurance Sampling methodology was used in both assessments: 19 villages were randomly selected in each of five lots in each of three districts then caregivers of children 6‐59 months age randomly selected and interviewed. RESULTS: Coverage of VAS, Albendazole, and Pentavalent 3 before and after these changes was over 80%, 75%, and 80% respectively, equitable by sex, age, caregiver's religion, and educational status. Comparison with 2018 found more lots failed to reach 80% VAS by verbal affirmation (10 vs 2), and coverage in one district (Bo) had dropped (77.5% vs 92.3%). Fewer caregivers were aware that VAS should be taken every 6 months (27% vs 50%), that complementary feeding should start at 6 months (63% vs 77%) or were providing minimal dietary diversity (27% vs 45%). There was an increase in caregivers using modern contraception (45% vs 35%), obtaining information about contraception from a friend (14% vs 9%), while fewer thought country rope/herbs (traditional contraceptives) were “effective” (11% vs 21%) and stockouts of contraceptives at health facilities had dropped (24% vs 55%). Stipends for CHWs cost approximately $750 K vs complementary food: $112 K. CONCLUSION: Overall coverage for VAS, Albendazole, and Pentavalent remained effective but VAS had dropped significantly in one district. Complementary feeding practices had declined. Awareness, uptake, and contraceptives supply chains had improved. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8238388/ /pubmed/34195385 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.297 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Health Science Reports published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Koroma, Aminata S.
Kamara, Habib I.
Moses, Francis
Bah, Mariama
Turay, Mohamed
Kandeh, Abdulai
Kandeh, Shekuba
Allieu, Henry
Kargbo, Anita
MaCauley, Anna
Hodges, Mary H.
Doledec, David
The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019
title The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019
title_full The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019
title_fullStr The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019
title_full_unstemmed The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019
title_short The impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in Sierra Leone, 2019
title_sort impact on key indicators of reproductive and child health after changes in program modalities in sierra leone, 2019
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8238388/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34195385
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.297
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