mesfin beyero june 12, 2012 addis ababa

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Alive & Thrive World Vision Operations Research project on Timed and Targeted Counseling TOPS East Africa Knowledge Sharing Meeting Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

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Alive & Thrive World Vision Operations Research project on Timed and Targeted Counseling TOPS East Africa Knowledge Sharing Meeting. Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa. Presentation outline:. Program overview Core intervention Progress to-date - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Alive & ThriveWorld Vision Operations Research project

on Timed and Targeted Counseling

TOPS East Africa Knowledge Sharing Meeting

Mesfin BeyeroJune 12, 2012Addis Ababa

Page 2: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Presentation outline:

• Program overview• Core intervention• Progress to-date• Mid-term evaluation and lesson’s learnt• Monitoring mechanisms• The way forward

Page 3: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Program overview Alive & Thrive, launched with a grant from the

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, is an initiative to improve infant and young child feeding in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Viet Nam, reduce stunting and inform policies and programs around the world. Alive & Thrive is managed by FHI 360 with consortium members including: BRAC, GMMB, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Save the Children, University of California – Davis, and World Vision.

Page 4: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Woreda(District)

Kebele(sub-district)

village

HEW supervisors/PHCU

HEWs

Peer mothers

Mothers, fathers, other caregivers

householdtraining super

Timed and Targeted Counseling

Program overview…cont’d

•10 Counseling sessions

•Home visitstraining super

Page 5: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Why Stunting!• Reduced physical stature (short)• Reduced cognitive development• Delays in starting school (7 months)• Losses of schooling (0.7 grades)• Reductions in lifetime earnings• Overall reduced economic productivity, wages, income• Smaller babies, inter-generational transmission of malnutrition

and poverty

Page 6: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

The core intervention:

• The core intervention for the community-based program is the ‘Timed and Targeted Counseling’ (TTC) approach.

• Peer Mothers are the primary counselors.

Page 7: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

The core intervention …cont’d:Why Peer Mothers (PMs)?

• IYCF counseling at the household level is very weak because Health Extension Workers (HEWs) are busy with the 16 packages of the health extension program, and other engagements,

• The PMs work to improve IYCF counseling at the household level focusing on the mother and other influential family members.

Page 8: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

The core intervention…cont’d:

Events

Opportunities for Cross-sector Cooperation

Developing Media Coverage

Shared Message Platform

Information & Materials

Advocacy Training

Media Training

Coalition Building

Cross-sector Outreach

Champion

Identification

Media Outreach

Do mothers prefer to be counseled by Peer Mothers?

Yes, because…

• They belong to the community the mothers are living, • They are experienced (have children),

• Are trusted by the community,

• The community value both formal training and experience rather than just training alone.

Page 9: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

The core intervention…cont’d:

Events

Opportunities for Cross-sector Cooperation

Developing Media Coverage

Shared Message Platform

Information & Materials

Advocacy Training

Media Training

Coalition Building

Cross-sector Outreach

Champion

Identification

Media Outreach

•Timed – information given when behaviors can best be put into practice, •Targeted – information given to both those who practice the recommended

behaviors and those who influence adoption of the behaviors (mother +), and

• Counseling steps need to be followed.

Page 10: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

The core intervention…cont’d:

Events

Opportunities for Cross-sector Cooperation

Developing Media Coverage

Shared Message Platform

Information & Materials

Advocacy Training

Media Training

Coalition Building

Cross-sector Outreach

Champion

Identification

Media Outreach

• Research has shown that caregivers require skilled support to adequately feed their infants,

• Inappropriate feeding practices are often a greater determinant of inadequate intakes than the availability of foods in the households. (WHO)

Page 11: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Progress to date…cont’d• The ToT Guide for

health workers (HWs) has been developed, and are trained on IYCF in the context of TTC,

- 50 HWs have been trained in the 1st year and 38 have been refreshed in the 2nd year.

Page 12: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Progress to date…cont’d• The HWs then

trained the Health Extension Workers (HEWs) using the training manual developed in Amharic - 259 HEWs have been trained in the 1st year and refreshed in the 2nd year.

Page 13: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Progress to date…cont’d• The HEWs in turn

trained the Peer Mothers (PMs) using the 15 TTC counseling cards (Ten cards for the 10 visits and 5 for the cross-cutting issues,) – 2303 PMs have been trained so far.

Page 14: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Progress to date…cont’d• Peer Mothers make a series of 10 visits, the

message at each visit being TIMED (the right message for the particular contact point) based on scientific evidence and experience from the field.

1. 9th month of pregnancy 2. Delivery 3. 2nd day 4. 1st week 5. 4th week 6. 3rd month 7. 6th month 8. 8th month 9. 12th month 10. 18th month

Page 15: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Results from midterm evaluation

• Peer Mothers’ visits (11 indicators) – Are the PMs conducting the visits on the specified schedules?

• IYCF practices by mothers (16 indicators) – Have mothers adopted the optimal infant and young child feeding (breastfeeding and complementary feeding)practices?

Page 16: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Results from midterm evaluation…cont’d

• Day of delivery and 2nd day visits were poor:

- Difficult to catch mothers - Guests not allowed to come into the room during delivery• Suggestions for improving the visits: - More than one visit during pregnancy

Page 17: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Results from midterm evaluation…cont’d

• Breastfeeding: - early initiation of breastfeeding - good - feeding of colostrum - poor - avoidance of pre-lacteals - good - continuation of breastfeeding - goodWhy good? • The expulsion of the placenta as the result of the early initiation of breastfeeding has encouraged mothers to adopt

the behavior.

Page 18: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Results from midterm evaluation…cont’d

Complementary feeding: - timely introduction of CF - good - frequency - good - dietary diversity – poor

Page 19: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Results from midterm evaluation…cont’d

Why poor?• Expensive, unavailable, causes tapeworm even if cooked, ignorance on how to prepare meat for the baby (“Meat powder”) • Seasonality,

• Available in most households; tendency to sell; not used to buying eggs from market,

• Mainly sour skimmed milk or “Arera”

Page 20: Mesfin Beyero June 12, 2012 Addis Ababa

Questions?