“As a woman who watches how my family is… I take the difficult decisions”: a qualitative study on integrated family planning and childhood immunisation services in five African countries

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Study Justification:
– The study aims to explore women’s choices and decision-making around modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) in sub-Saharan Africa, where there is a substantial unmet need for MCMs.
– It investigates whether integrating family planning (FP) services with childhood immunizations influenced women’s perceptions and decisions to use MCMs.
– The study addresses the multi-level barriers, including socio-cultural norms, that discourage the use of MCMs.
Highlights:
– Most women expressed a desire to space or limit births for improved health and welfare for themselves and their children.
– Women’s decision to use MCMs was driven by their reproductive desires, but fears of side effects, community stigma, and disapproving husbands sometimes hindered their choices.
– Integration of FP and childhood immunization services provided opportunities for health providers to counter misinformation and improved access to MCMs.
– Some women chose to use MCMs without their husbands’ approval or despite cultural norms because of perceived health and economic benefits.
Recommendations:
– Promote awareness and education about the benefits of MCMs to address misconceptions and reduce stigma.
– Involve community and religious leaders as peer influencers to encourage acceptance of MCM use.
– Strengthen training for health providers on FP counseling and MCM administration.
– Ensure the availability and accessibility of a range of MCMs in health facilities and outreach clinics.
– Continue integrating FP and childhood immunization services to provide repeat opportunities for counseling and access to MCMs.
Key Role Players:
– Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) involved in implementing the intervention.
– Health administrators responsible for overseeing the delivery of integrated services.
– Health providers, including midwives, nurses, and community health workers, who deliver FP counseling and administer MCMs.
– Peer influencers, such as male champions and health development army members, who act as role models and dispel myths.
– Religious leaders who can influence community acceptance of MCM use.
– Women themselves, as active participants in decision-making about MCM use.
Cost Items for Planning Recommendations:
– Training programs for health providers on FP counseling and MCM administration.
– Awareness campaigns and educational materials to promote MCMs and address misconceptions.
– Supply of a range of MCMs, including condoms, oral contraceptive pills, injectables, implants, and intra-uterine devices.
– Support for ongoing provision of routine childhood immunizations.
– Coordination and monitoring of integrated services.
– Engagement of peer influencers and religious leaders in community mobilization efforts.
Please note that the actual cost of implementing these recommendations would depend on various factors and would need to be determined through a detailed budgeting process.

The strength of evidence for this abstract is 8 out of 10.
The evidence in the abstract is based on a qualitative study that included semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions with a total of 253 participants in five African countries. The study explored women’s choices and decision-making around modern contraceptive method (MCM) use, and examined the impact of integrating family planning (FP) services with childhood immunizations on women’s perceptions and decisions. The data were coded and analyzed using NVivo software, and an analytical framework was developed. The study found that integrating FP and childhood immunization services expanded women’s choices about MCM use and created opportunities for autonomous decision-making. The evidence is based on a substantial number of interviews and discussions, providing rich insights into women’s experiences and perspectives. However, the evidence is limited to the specific context of the intervention and may not be generalizable to other settings. To improve the evidence, future studies could consider using a mixed-methods approach to gather both qualitative and quantitative data, and include a larger and more diverse sample to enhance the representativeness of the findings.

Background: Family planning (FP) has the potential to improve maternal and child health outcomes and to reduce poverty in sub-Saharan Africa. However, substantial unmet need for modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) persists in this region. Current literature highlights multi-level barriers, including socio-cultural norms that discourage the use of MCMs. This paper explores women’s choices and decision-making around MCM use and examines whether integrating FP services with childhood immunisations influenced women’s perceptions of, and decision to use, an MCM. Methods: 94 semi-structured interviews and 21 focus group discussions with women, health providers, and community members (N = 253) were conducted in health facilities and outreach clinics where an intervention was delivering integrated FP and childhood immunisation services in Benin, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi and Uganda. Data were coded using Nvivo software and an analytical framework was developed to support interpretative and thematic analyses on women’s decision-making about MCM use. Results: Most women shared the reproductive desire to space or limit births because of the perceived benefits of improved health and welfare for themselves and for their children, including the economic advantages. For some, choices about MCM use were restricted because of wider societal influences. Women’s decision to use MCMs was driven by their reproductive desires, but for some that was stymied by fears of side effects, community stigma, and disapproving husbands, which led to clandestine MCM use. Health providers acknowledged that women understood the benefits of using MCMs, but highlighted that the wider socio-cultural norms of their community often contributed to a reluctance to use them. Integration of FP and childhood immunisation services provided repeat opportunities for health providers to counter misinformation and it improved access to MCMs, including for women who needed to use them covertly. Conclusions: Some women chose to use MCMs without the approval of their husbands, and/or despite cultural norms, because of the perceived health and economic benefits for themselves and for their families, and because they lived with the consequences of short birth intervals and large families. Integrated FP and childhood immunisation services expanded women’s choices about MCM use and created opportunities for women to make decisions autonomously.

The intervention was implemented in predominantly rural communities at health facilities and outreach clinics by non-governmental organisations (NGOs) between January 2015 and January 2018 (Table ​(Table1).1). The scale of the interventions ranged from implementing integrated services in 14 health centres in one region in Uganda to 114 health posts across two districts in Ethiopia. The integration model varied by country and site; but broadly the intervention had similar components and objectives. They all sought to improve access to and uptake of FP services by co-locating, to varying degrees, messaging, counselling and the provision of MCMs with childhood immunisations. In this study, co-location is taken to mean that women could access both childhood immunisations and MCMs during the same health visit, however, these two services were often administered by different health providers and/or at different points in time during that visit. MCMs included condoms, oral contraceptive pill, injectables, implants and the intra-uterine device. However, the availability of these methods varied by site and country. In general, the intervention components in each country included: health provider training on FP counselling and MCM administration; raising awareness in communities about FP through existing structures (including community and religious leaders, and peer influencers, such as expert clients or male champions); supplying a range of short- and/or long-acting MCMs; and, supporting ongoing provision of routine childhood immunisations. Integrated family planning and childhood immunisation interventions by country 1 health zone: Adjohoun-Bonou-Dangbo (ABD) health zone 19 health centres; 1 hospital National: 12.4 Ouémé department: 15.2 [17] Oueme department: Among FP users: 35/57.2 Among non FP users: 19.2/75.7 Services delivered at health facilities Midwives and nurses give FP counselling and administer MCMs Peer influencers mobilise women in the community to attend FP and immunisation services 2 districts: Bambasi and Assosa districts, Benishangul Gumuz Regional State (BGRS) 114 health posts National: 35.3 BGRS region: 28.4 [18] Benishangul-Gumuz: Among FP users: 75.9/14.4 Among non FP users: 55.1/22.3 Services delivered at health posts and during 45-day post-partum home visits Community health workers (HEWs) give FP counselling and administer MCMs (except implant removals) Peer influencers (HDA) act as role models to encourage women to use MCMs, dispel harmful myths 2 districts: Garba Tulla, Isiolo county and Pokot West/Pokot South, West Pokot county 19 health facilities National: 53.2 Isiolo: 26.3 West Pokot: 14.2 [19] Services delivered at health facilities Nurses provide FP counselling and administer methods Community health workers (CHVs) deliver health messages and mobilise women in the community to attend FP services Peer influencers (male champions) act as role models and share the benefits of using MCMs to space children 3 districts: Blantyre, Mwanza, Thyolo 24 outreach clinics National: 58.1 Southern region: 54.4 [20] Southern region: Among FP users: 75.3/15.7 Among non FP users: 50.5/36.1 Services delivered at routine monthly outreach clinics Community health workers (HSAs) provide FP counselling and short-acting methods; nurses provide long-term methods but are not always present 1 region: Karamoja 14 health centres National: 34.8 Karamoja: 6.5 [21] Karamoja region: Among FP users: 71.2/27.7 Among non FP users: 59.6/28.8 Services delivered at health facilities Midwives provide FP counselling and administer methods Community health workers (VHTs) deliver messages about FP and mobilise women to attend FP services using referral cards Peer influencers act as role models to encourage women to use MCMs, dispel harmful myths IRC International Rescue Committee, HEWs Health Extension Workers, HDA Health Development Army, CHVs Community Health Volunteers, HSAs Health Surveillance Assistants, VHTs Volunteer Health Team Regional data from the Demographic and Health Surverys (DHS) of countries included in this study indicates that among married women who are currently using FP, a high proportion of women reported being involved in decision making about FP, either jointly with their husband or making the decision themselves (range from 90.3 to 98.9%). However, among women who reported not using FP, women’s involvement with decision-making was lower (range from 77.4 to 94.9%)—data on decision making was not asked in latest DHS for Kenya. Unmet need for FP, defined as women who want to space or limit births but are not currently using FP, among married women ranged from 12.4% in the Eastern province in Kenya to 33.7% in the Oueme region of Benin [17–21]. Purposive sampling was used to select key stakeholders involved, or with an interest, in the intervention including implementing NGOs, health administrators, health providers (community- and facility-based), peer influencers, religious leaders, male community members, and women who self-reported as MCM users and non-users. Participants were selected through a consultative process with the implementing NGO in each country. Using this process, key stakeholders were identified based on an initial programme theory of how the intervention works [22] followed by maximum variation sampling amongst identified categories of stakeholders [23]. Providers were selected based on having experience in delivering either immunisation or FP services in health facilities where the intervention was perceived to have been more, or less, well received based on monitoring data collected by the implementers. They were approached in the study setting, at either health facilities or outreach clinics where the intervention was implemented, and asked to participate in the study. Interviews were conducted on site and were visible to others but out of earshot. In total, 94 SSIs and 21 FGDs with 253 participants were conducted between October 2017 and March 2018. SSIs were used, when possible, because of the sensitive nature of the topics being discussed and to enable the interviewer to explore themes and gain individual perspectives in greater depth. FGDs were used to explore collective views and were conducted as part of the evaluation, when feasible, to understand where different groups of stakeholders might have similar or divergent views regarding aspects of FP. For instance, FGDs were sought with male community members to generate a rich discussion around the wider socio-cultural factors that influence perceptions about FP generally, and, MCM use specifically. Using a mix of SSIs and FDGs with women participants enabled both a deeper understanding of women’s individual perceptions towards FP and MCM use and opportunities to understand how perceptions about socio-cultural norms and FP practices may differ or not. Data from SSIs assisted the researchers in recognising if and when groupthink might be present in the FGDs [24]. Interview and discussion guides were developed for SSIs and FGDs, which were informed by local implementers. Questions were standardised across sites and countries to enable uniformity in the analysis framework, however, where specific contextual elements arose, interviewers were trained to explore those threads in greater detail. For both SSIs and FGDs, topics discussed with health providers included: workload, socio-cultural norms, healthcare access, delivery of integrated services and perceptions of women’s use or non-use of MCMs. For women, topics included: reasons for use or non-use of MCMs; barriers to MCM use; access to FP services; and, community-level acceptance of MCM use. And for community members topics included: socio-cultural norms, acceptance of FP, and perceptions of the integrated delivery of FP and immunisations. Interviews and discussions were conducted in each country by SK and a local researcher who was a trained interviewer and could facilitate a deeper understanding of the contextual factors that arose during the interviews and discussions. In Benin interviews were conducted in French and Ouémé; in Ethiopia in Amharic and English; in Kenya in Borana, Pokot and English; in Malawi in Chichewa and English; and in Uganda in Karamojong and English. All interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim and then translated into English by experienced transcribers and translators. To guide analysis an analytical framework was developed based upon the Sexual and Reproductive Health Empowerment framework by Karp et al. [25], which illustrates a woman’s empowerment journey across three phases: (1) existence of choice—where women have the capacity to recognise and set their reproductive goals, and how contraceptive use aids in achieving their reproductive goals, (2) exercise of choice—where women make decisions to act on those reproductive goals, and (3) achievement of choice—when women act to achieve their desired reproductive outcomes. Karp’s framework is useful because it acknowledges that reproductive desires are separate and distinct from the decision to use an MCM, which enables a deeper examination of the factors influencing women’s reproductive desires and their decisions to use an MCM to achieve their goals. In this paper, women’s decision-making about MCM use is explored within the context of integrated FP and childhood immunisation services. Our analytical framework (Fig. 1) builds upon the Karp framework for this purpose suggesting that women’s existence of choice (reproductive preferences/desires) and exercise of choice (decision to act on those desires) are influenced by women’s perceptions of MCMs and by external influences—such as a husband’s perceptions of MCMs, the socio-cultural context and access to MCMs. And further, it suggests that integrated FP and immunisation services may influence women’s reproductive desires and their decision-making about MCMs. Analytical framework The translated transcripts from the SSIs and FGDs were imported into NVivo 11.2 for coding and analysis. Transcripts were anonymized but the type of stakeholder attributable to each quote was retained to aid analyses. The data were coded and the primary analysis was conducted by JH and then discussed amongst the evaluation team to ensure a consensus was reached where ideas and opinions differed. It was agreed among the research team that data saturation was reached once no additional themes or sub-themes were being generated from the data [24]. The primary analyses were country specific with one coding framework used across all countries. The data were initially coded based on the major themes from the interview topic guides and included: (1) the actors involved in delivery and uptake of FP services; (2) the cultural and social context; (3) the delivery of the intervention; (4) decision-making of health providers and women; and (5) outcomes relating to the uptake of FP services and the use of MCMs. An iterative process was used, and additional themes and patterns were identified [26]. Interpretative syntheses were conducted to explore overarching themes across all five countries [27] including a thematic analysis that involved mapping themes to the analytical framework to identify: (1) internal motivations for MCM use and (2) external forces influencing the decision to act on the reproductive desires and (3) the role of integrated services in shaping women’s choices about MCMs and their decision-making on use. The Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research guidelines were used to ensure rigorous reporting of the study [28].

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Based on the provided description, the following innovations can be recommended to improve access to maternal health:

1. Integrated Services: Implementing integrated family planning and childhood immunization services can improve access to maternal health. By co-locating messaging, counseling, and the provision of modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) with childhood immunizations, women can access both services during the same health visit.

2. Health Provider Training: Providing training to health providers on family planning counseling and the administration of MCMs can improve their ability to provide accurate information and support to women seeking maternal health services.

3. Raising Awareness: Raising awareness in communities about family planning through existing structures, such as community and religious leaders, can help dispel myths and misconceptions surrounding MCMs. Peer influencers, such as expert clients or male champions, can also play a role in mobilizing women to attend family planning services.

4. Supplying a Range of MCMs: Ensuring the availability of a range of short- and long-acting MCMs can give women more options and increase their access to the methods that best suit their needs and preferences.

5. Addressing Socio-Cultural Norms: Recognizing and addressing the wider socio-cultural norms that discourage the use of MCMs is crucial. Health providers can play a role in countering misinformation and stigma associated with MCM use, creating a supportive environment for women to make informed decisions.

6. Community Acceptance: Promoting community-level acceptance of MCM use through education and dialogue can help reduce stigma and increase access to maternal health services.

7. Involving Women in Decision-Making: Ensuring women are involved in decision-making about family planning can empower them to make choices that align with their reproductive goals. This can be achieved through counseling and support from health providers, as well as through community engagement initiatives.

These innovations aim to improve access to maternal health services, address barriers to MCM use, and empower women to make informed decisions about their reproductive health.
AI Innovations Description
The recommendation that can be developed into an innovation to improve access to maternal health based on the study is the integration of family planning (FP) services with childhood immunization services. This integration model aims to co-locate messaging, counseling, and the provision of modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) with childhood immunizations. By providing repeat opportunities for health providers to counter misinformation and improve access to MCMs, this integrated approach can expand women’s choices about MCM use and create opportunities for women to make decisions autonomously.

The intervention was implemented in predominantly rural communities at health facilities and outreach clinics by non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Benin, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, and Uganda. The scale of the interventions varied across sites and countries, but the components and objectives were similar. These included health provider training on FP counseling and MCM administration, raising awareness in communities about FP through existing structures, supplying a range of MCMs, and supporting ongoing provision of routine childhood immunizations.

The study found that integrating FP and childhood immunization services improved access to MCMs and influenced women’s perceptions of and decision to use them. Women’s decision to use MCMs was driven by their reproductive desires, but for some, this was hindered by fears of side effects, community stigma, and disapproving husbands. The integration of services provided opportunities for health providers to address these barriers and counter misinformation, ultimately improving access to MCMs.

By integrating FP services with childhood immunization services, women can access both services during the same health visit, making it more convenient and reducing barriers to access. This integrated approach also allows for continuous counseling and support, which can address concerns and misconceptions about MCMs. Additionally, the integration of services creates opportunities for women to make decisions autonomously, even in the face of societal norms and disapproving husbands.

Overall, the recommendation to integrate FP and childhood immunization services can be developed into an innovation to improve access to maternal health. This approach has the potential to expand women’s choices, counter misinformation, and empower women to make autonomous decisions about their reproductive health.
AI Innovations Methodology
Based on the provided description, here are some potential recommendations for improving access to maternal health:

1. Strengthening community awareness and education: Implement community-based programs that raise awareness about the importance of maternal health and family planning. This can include educating community members about the benefits of using modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) and dispelling myths and misconceptions.

2. Integration of services: Continue integrating family planning services with childhood immunization services. This approach has shown promise in improving access to MCMs, as it provides repeated opportunities for health providers to educate women about the benefits of using MCMs and address any concerns or misconceptions.

3. Empowering women to make autonomous decisions: Promote women’s autonomy in decision-making regarding MCM use. This can be achieved by providing comprehensive information, counseling, and support to women, enabling them to make informed choices about their reproductive health.

4. Addressing socio-cultural barriers: Develop strategies to address socio-cultural norms and stigmas that discourage the use of MCMs. This can involve engaging community and religious leaders, as well as peer influencers, to promote acceptance and support for MCM use.

To simulate the impact of these recommendations on improving access to maternal health, a methodology could include the following steps:

1. Define the indicators: Identify specific indicators that measure access to maternal health, such as the proportion of women using MCMs, the rate of unmet need for contraception, or the number of maternal deaths.

2. Collect baseline data: Gather data on the current status of the indicators before implementing the recommendations. This can be done through surveys, interviews, or existing data sources.

3. Implement the recommendations: Put the recommended interventions into practice, ensuring proper implementation and monitoring.

4. Collect post-intervention data: After a certain period of time, collect data on the indicators again to assess the impact of the recommendations. This can be done using the same methods as in the baseline data collection.

5. Analyze the data: Compare the baseline and post-intervention data to determine the changes in the indicators. This analysis can involve statistical methods, such as calculating percentages or conducting regression analyses.

6. Interpret the results: Interpret the findings to understand the impact of the recommendations on improving access to maternal health. This can involve identifying trends, patterns, and correlations in the data.

7. Draw conclusions and make recommendations: Based on the results, draw conclusions about the effectiveness of the recommendations and make further recommendations for improvement if necessary.

It is important to note that the specific methodology for simulating the impact may vary depending on the available resources, time frame, and context of the study.

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