Care International provided the following updates on progress in achieving its FP2020 commitments:
Validating tools to measure the impact of key approaches on health outcomes: CARE has developed three tools to support measurement of women’s empowerment, governance and health outcomes.
- WEMEASR (Women’s Empowerment- Multidimensional Evaluation of Agency, Social Capital and Relations). WEMEASR is a quantitative survey tool designed to use with women and consists of 20 short scales that measure women’s empowerment in domains critical to sexual, reproductive and maternal health. CARE is using various adaptations of WE‐MEASR in program evaluations in several countries to assess how well the scales work in other contexts and to explore associations between programming, empowerment and health behavior outcomes.
- Health Worker VOICES (Voices in Open, Inclusive Communities and Effective Spaces): A Tool to Measure Governance in Sexual, Reproductive and Maternal Health Programs (under review)
- Women’s VOICES : A Tool to Measure Governance in Sexual, Reproductive and Maternal Health Programs (under review)
The growing popularity and promise of social accountability approaches within the health sector makes it particularly important to foster good evaluation research to ensure that these approaches are effective. To this end, we developed and tested a set of measures evaluate a social accountability approach—CARE’s Community Score Card (CSC)—on reproductive and maternal health. We developed two survey tools—one for women (Women’s VOICES) and one for health workers (Health Workers’ VOICES). These tools include scales to measure constructs within CARE’s key governance outcomes domains: empowerment of women and community members; empowerment of health workers; and expanded, inclusive, and effective negotiated spaces in which the two groups can effectively interact to improve health service delivery and outcomes.
Reaching the most vulnerable and marginalized populations to reduce inequality: CARE focuses on reducing global poverty and inequality, and increasing social justice through the empowerment of women, girls and other vulnerable and marginalized populations. CARE has worked in several countries to implement programs and activities that work to reduce inequality:
- In Bangladesh, CARE is working with GlaxoSmithKline and the Government of Bangladesh to ensure mothers and children in remote areas of the country receive appropriate and necessary maternal and child health services, including family planning information and methods. CARE has worked with these partners on the Community Health Worker Initiative, to develop a skilled cadre of private MNCH providers that can complement government services in remote areas where the public health system is not adequately functioning. These private, skilled providers are women who come from the communities themselves, receive government training on skilled birth attendance and receive payment for their services, either through government entitlement schemes or fee for service from clients (these providers meet with communities and local government to establish fees that everyone can pay). The next phase of the project will include training specifically on family planning information, methods and services. This cadre of private, skilled providers is reducing a reliance on unskilled providers and ultimately, reducing geographic and wealth inequities in access to critical healthcare services.
- Through the Supporting Access to Family Planning and Post Abortion Care (SAFPAC) Initiative, CARE supports the delivery of family planning and other essential SRH services within CARE’s emergency response in Nepal and Syria, to those most affected and left vulnerable by emergency and conflict. In Nepal, CARE has been providing clean delivery kits and dignity kits to women living in the hardest-hit rural areas and is working with partners, such as UNFPA and local NGOs, to ensure access to life-saving SRH services (family planning, safe delivery, rape treatment, and STI treatment). In Syria, CARE is providing financial, technical and material support to a local NGO to deliver comprehensive family planning services to Syrian women served by 6 health centers in Idleb and Aleppo governorates.
- In Ethiopia, the TESFA project had targeted married adolescent girls who are hard to reach, most vulnerable, socially isolated groups in their community. The primary goal of the project was to improve their sexual reproductive health, with a particularly focus on increasing access to family planning and improving their economic empowerment. The initiative helped to draw lessons on how to reach an isolated subgroup of girls, recruit them into program and facilitate their empowerment process including their access to FP information and services. At the end of the project, access to FP services had significantly increased, with current use of modern contraception increased from 51% to 78%.
Ensuring women and girls’ family planning and reproductive health needs are addressed in both development, emergency and post-conflict response activities: CARE’s sexual, reproductive and maternal health programming works throughout the emergency to development continuum to reach the needs of the most vulnerable, especially women and girls. CARE works with partners such as UNFPA and UNHCR to reach the most vulnerable in emergency and crisis-affected settings.
- Since 2011, CARE’s Supporting Access to Family Planning and Post-Abortion Care in Emergencies (SAFPAC) Initiative has been reducing unintended pregnancies and deaths from unsafe abortion by delivering FP and PAC services to crisis-affected populations in 5 countries with large SRH needs: Chad, Djibouti, DR Congo, Mali, and Pakistan. Core interventions include: 1) providing competency-based training with follow-up clinical assessment and coaching to health providers; 2) ensuring a continuous supply of reproductive health commodities to all health facilities and strengthening inventory management practices; 3) making supportive supervision visits to health facilities on a regular basis; and 4) mobilizing communities to raise awareness about family planning and to shift norms that block women’s access to family planning services. At the same time, the initiative has been strengthening CARE’s institutional capacity to support SRH programming across its emergency response. Currently, the initiative supports the delivery of family planning and other essential SRH services within CARE’s emergency response in Nepal and Syria (see above). Between July 2011 and May 2015, the SAFPAC project reached 98,658 new users of modern contraceptive methods across the 5 countries (with a catchment population exceeding a half million women of reproductive age), 57% of whom chose long-acting methods of implants or intrauterine devices
- CARE is also committed to reaching the FP and RH needs in emergency and post-conflict responses though our leadership in and engagement with the Interagency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crises (IAWG). CARE serves on the IAWG steering committee where it has successfully advocated for the inclusion of family planning as part of the Minimum Initial Service Package for Reproductive Health in Crisis Situations (MISP).