Notes du groupe de travail Paludisme pendant la Grossesse Termes de Reference du Groupe Notre interet en voulant etre membre de ce groupe ? La frequences des appels telephoniques : Tous les 2 mois le 1er jeudi de chaque mois. Leadership : 2 co-Présidents qui doivent assurer l’animation des discussions d’au moins 3 reunions ; Le secretariat de CCoP assure l’appel Liste des pays membres Mozambique Sergio Tsabete, Felisberto Massingue Ouganda Basil Tushabe, Olanya George, Mabel Naibere Burkina Faso Ouerdaogo Nicolas, Kabore Noel Madagascar Gino Razafindrahaminitra, Roumana Hassanaly, Ramanatiaray Tiana, Andritiana Tzarafihavy Senegal Sonko Fagueye Liberia Daniel Somah Sierra Leonne Wani Kumba Lahai Tanzanie Pamela Kweka Cote d’Ivoire Nene Diallo Guinée Conakry Mariama Gobicko, Denise Timbo Malawie Taonga Mafuleka, Chancy Mauluka Mali Mory Camara, Boubacar Bocoum Et Nigeria Benson Ohemu En brainstorming problèmes prioritaires sur le Paludisme pendant la Grossesse sont : Doses de SP pour la femme enceinte Traitement du paludisme chez la femme enceinte par le CTA Vaincre la pesanteur socio culturel (Et que la femme enceinte parte tôt au centre) Travailler sur le tabou autour de la révélation de la grossesse Support du mari lors de la grossesse Cibler les prestataires en mettant l’accent sur le secteur privé Effectuer la consultation forraine intégrée (Cas de la Cote d’ivoire) Quels sont les résultats à atteindre dans les 2 prochains mois : Utilisation des services TPI par les femmes enceintes (Traditions et implication des hommes) Partage de données sur le TPI à la SP Offre de services et disponibilité des médicaments SP Utilisation de mass media sur le TPI Mobilisation sociale et utilisation des leaders communautaires Besoins de partage et d’appui par le groupe : Mali : Partage du programme Mass media sur la TPI mis en œuvre par KJK (JHU/CCP) Madagascar : Expérience de SBCC dans les écoles sur le TPI (PSI) et la communication sur la SP Liberia : Renforcement de capacités des agents de santé en CIP sur le TPI (HC3) Ouganda : Partage de la campagne de TPI (Etape de production) FHI360 Mozambique : Implication des hommes dans la grossesse Cote d’Ivoire : Utilisation de la strategie d’envoie de SMS pour la recherche des femmes enceintes perdues de vue pour le TPI à la SP Proposition de nomination de CoPrésidents : Boubacar BOCOUM JHU/CCP Mali Roumana PSI Madagascar Wani Coumba NMCP Sierra Léone Thank you! M&E Task Force Work Plan for 2017 Role of the task force Create a forum for sharing best practices on monitoring and evaluation of malaria SBCC Help disseminate evidence on the impact of malaria SBCC Encourage the use of best practices for documenting the impact of malaria SBCCC Liaise with the other task forces here at the SBCC Working Group (MIP, Case Management and Vector Control) as well as those at RBM Operations Research Priorities Encourage the analysis of existing data including data collected in MIS/DHS/MICS and KAPs using the Indicator Guide Including data from durability monitoring surveys Encourage more outcome monitoring (to complement output monitoring) Potential presentations Launch the Indicator Reference Guide, v2 Outcome monitoring using omnibus surveys – planning, implementation and data use (Mathew Okoh, HC3 Nigeria) Evaluation of integrated health communication programs (Malawi) Disseminate findings from the Evidence Review Activities Translate and disseminate the Indicator Guide Develop guidance on M&E of health worker SBCC for malaria Encourage the analysis of existing datasets that use indicator and questions from the guide Develop training materials on analysis Develop guidance on budgeting for M&E of malaria SBCC activities Leadership and communication Current co-chairs: Angela Acosta and Jessie Butts Looking for increased leadership and participation in the group Next call - Discuss roles and responsibilities of co-chairs and members; identify roles and leaders for various activities and areas Calls – Every other month, 2nd Thursday, at 9 am EST/4 pm EAT/3 pm CAT/2 pm WAT. Indicator Guide Issues Discussed Current Indicators in V2 Reach/Exposure 1. Proportion of people who recall hearing or seeing any malaria message within the last 6 months Knowledge & Awareness 2. Proportion of people who name mosquitoes as the cause of malaria 3. Proportion of people who know the main symptom of malaria 4. Proportion of people who know the treatment for malaria 5. Proportion of people who know preventive measures for malaria Current Indicators in V2 (continued) Risk/Efficacy 6. Proportion of people who perceive they are at risk from malaria 7. Proportion of people who feel that consequences of malaria are serious 8. Proportion of people who believe that the recommended practice or product will reduce their risk 9. Proportion of people who are confident in their ability to perform a specific malaria-related behavior Current Indicators in V2 (continued) Norms and Attitudes 6. Proportion of people with a favorable attitude toward the product, practice or service 7. Proportion of people that believe the majority of their friends and community members currently practice the behavior Targeted Behaviors 8. Proportion of people who practice the recommended behavior #1: Do we need additional knowledge indicators? Recap: current knowledge indicators:* 2. Proportion of people who name mosquitoes as the cause of malaria Additional indicator 2a. Proportion of people who name ONLY mosquitoes as the cause of malaria 3. Proportion of people who know the main symptom of malaria 4. Proportion of people who know the treatment for malaria 5. Proportion of people who know preventive measures for malaria Additional indicator 5a: Proportion of people who know Potential additional knowledge indicators? Care-seeking - Proportion of people who know that they should seek treatment from an approved source within 24 hours for fever Testing (provider) – Proportion of providers who cite malaria testing as being the only way to diagnose malaria IPTp (pregnant women) – Proportion of pregnant women who are aware that IPTp is a way to protect themselves and their baby from malaria during pregnancy (subanalysis of indicator 5) IPTp (provider) – Proportion of providers who know the national guidelines for IPTp dosing (timing and frequency) #2 Health worker behaviors and indicators recommended Desired Behaviors Ideal Behavioral Indicators Health worker Proportion of pregnant women at adherence to ANC that received IPTp according to IPTp guidelines national guidelines Health worker adherence to malaria case management guidelines Current Standard Indicators (MERG)* Proportion of women who received 3 or more doses of IPTp during ANC visits during their last pregnancy Proportion of fever cases receiving a • Proportion of CU5 malaria diagnostic test (or proportion with fever in last 2 of malaria cases diagnostically weeks with confirmed) finger/heel stick • Proportion receiving Proportion of tested cases ACT among CU5with treated/not treated according to test fever in last 2 weeks results (or proportion of confirmed who received any positive cases receiving ACT) antimalarial *Data sources: MIS/DHS; health facility surveys , in-depth register reviews Summary Participants felt it was important to provide indicators on knowledge about care-seeking, treatment, and IPTp. However, knowledge is not enough. Changes in attitudes, norms, perceived risk, self-efficacy, response efficacy, perceived susceptibility, perceived severity, and behavior should be measured Participants recommended we add the suggested indicators. Current indicators allow this Health workers are an important target group for SBCC and their knowledge, attitudes and behaviors should also be measured The suggested indicators were accepted as proxy indicators for health worker behavior by the group (they THANK YOU! MERCI BEAUCOUP! ASANTENI SANA! OBRIGADO! What do the people want? How to translate indicators to incorporate SBCC activities already being done? How to liaise with other task forces? How to apply the indicator reference guide? SBCC and Operations Research Priorities How do we answer the efficacy questions? Outcome monitoring vs. Output monitoring Look at analyzing existing data against our indicator set Shared case studies/best practices on quarterly calls Training in triangulation to show impact Pairing M&E staff w/ SBC Piggy-back training onto field visits Co-facilitation by taskforce/platform representative Ideas for the coming year Improve communication to quantify SBCC impact Example activities: Madagascar net durability Malawi integrated SBC program evaluation Nigeria omnibus survey questions/results Newsletter Survey of costing structure for SBC evaluations Developing guidance on measuring CHW/provider SBCC How to increase country participation on calls How to translate indicators to incorporate SBCC activities already being done? How to liaise with other task forces? How to apply the indicator reference guide? Case Management SBCC Task Force Objective To strengthen SBCC in case management, particularly in testing and treatment for all the malaria phases (control, pre-elimination and elimination) To promote free case management for children under 5 (where applicable) Roles of CM SBCC Task Force To provide technical support to countries to implement the SBCC Case Management (CM) by sharing success stories, tools, best practices, and lessons learned Provide guidance to countries to prioritise SBCC Make a case for return on investment To review, evaluate, endorse, and share CM SBCC tools to be used by countries Activities Assisting countries come up with communication strategies and seasonal messages by providing examples and lessons learned from other countries Collecting and disseminating best practices, evidence of impact of SBCC on case management, promising practices through platforms like HealthCOMpass and/or SpringBoard discussions The Case Management SBCC Task Force will be an Interactive Technical Group Activities Reaching out to other CM professionals to join the general CCoP call and identifying case management topics and speakers to present on a future CCoP call Advocate for the availability of quality medicines and RDTs Reaching out to other RBM WG's working with commodities to convince them to use SBCC to make most efficient use of their resources Task Force Lead Chair: Kwame Gakpe, Ghana NMCP Co-chair: Mamadouba Sanoussi Camarra, RTI Guinea Term of Office: 1 year (Till 2017 SBCC meeting) Communication: Bimonthly calls First Wednesdays of the month at 2 PM GMT (8 AM ET) First call: 9th November 2016 List of members Mireille Lusiense Theresia Shirima Fatou Mwaluke Yanogo Pauline Kwame Gakpey Michel Itabu Ogwal William Amina Fakir-Knipiler Nan Lewicky Jeanine Musau Debora Freitas Lopez Dr. Andrintiana Tsarafihavy Fortunate Manjoro Camara Mamadouba Sanoussi Boladale Akin-Kolapo Dr. Tsapafinah Arabutiane Jackie Kisia Issues of concern No funding support for CM SBCC Task Force Collaboration Need and commitment of members needed for translators for the call Dedicated CM forum space in Springboard dedicated to Tatenda/Thank you
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