| Literature DB >> 29422099 |
Kathya Cordova-Pozo1, Andrea J Hoopes2, Freddy Cordova3, Bernardo Vega4, Zoyla Segura5, Arnold Hagens3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adolescent sexual and reproductive health (SRH), problems such as unplanned pregnancies are complex and multifactorial, thus requiring multifaceted prevention interventions. Evaluating the impact of such interventions is important to ensure efficiency, effectiveness and accountability for project funders and community members. In this study, we propose Results Based Management (RBM) as a framework for project management, using the Community Embedded Reproductive Health Care for Adolescents (CERCA) as a case study for RBM. The CERCA Project (2010-2014) tested interventions to reduce adolescent pregnancy in three Latin American countries, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua. Activities were designed to increase adolescent SRH behaviors in four domains: communication with parents, partners and peers; access to SRH information; access to SRH services; and use of contraception. When the project ended, the outcome evaluation showed limited impact with concerns about accuracy of monitoring and attrition of participants.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Community based interventions; Evaluation; Implementation research; Latin America; Monitoring; Multi-country; Results based management; Sexual and reproductive health; Theory of change
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29422099 PMCID: PMC5806234 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-018-0461-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Fig. 1CERCA: Shortened version of the Theory of Change
Fig. 2Plan: Expected impact of the CERCA project
Bolivia - Ecuador - Nicaragua: Frequency of activities in each intervention site *
| School 1 Comm. 1 | School 2 Comm. 2 | School 3 Comm. 3 | School 4 Comm. 4 | School 5 Comm. 5 | School 6 Comm. 6 | Coverage and Observations while preparing the table | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BOLIVIA: Frequency of activities for adolescents. Target 2000 adolescents in 12 schools | |||||||
| Email on SRH | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | Reached: 500 that had email in the 12 schools |
| Bidirectional text messages | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 | Reached: 1500 that had a phone in the 12 schools. More than 500 questions received |
| Workshops in SRH | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | Reached: 2000. 5 topics given to all the last 4 years of school. 30 adolescents per time × 5 times. In total 475 workshops done. |
| Private health consultations (Pilot study) | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 9 | – | Reached: 350. Pilot for 6 months and was not implemented in the other treatment schools |
| ECUADOR: Frequency of activities for adolescents. Target 2000 adolescents in 3 schools | |||||||
| Sport activities | 2 | 2 | 3 | na | na | na | Reached from school to school: 50, 40 and 1310 adolescents |
| Cinema on SRH | 1 | 5 | – | na | na | na | Reached from school to school: 40, 300 and 0 adolescents |
| SRH Fair | 2 | 1 | 2 | na | na | na | Reached from school to school: 2600, 800 and 1600 adolescents |
| Email on SRH | 5 | 5 | 5 | na | na | na | Reached from school to school: 841, 400 and 1000 adolescents |
| Text messages | 1 | 1 | 1 | na | na | na | Reached from school to school: 841, 400 and 1001 adolescents |
| Private health consultations | 1 | 1 | – | na | na | na | Reached from school to school: 18, 31 and 0 adolescents |
| Workshops in SRH | 93 | 25 | 47 | na | na | na | Frequency is not related to the # of topics. Reached from school to school: 10,048, 20,311 and 7988 adolescents |
| NICARAGUA: Frequency of activities for adolescents. Target 1500 adolescents in 6 communities | |||||||
| FOY training to the community | 51 | 36 | 46 | 69 | 58 | 52 | Reached from comm. 2 comm.: 1020, 720, 920, 1038, 1160 and 1040 people |
| Forum cinema on SRH | 21 | 23 | 23 | 19 | 23 | 29 | Reached from comm. 2 comm.: 315, 345, 345, 285, 345 and 435 people |
| FOY training to couples | 11 | 22 | 16 | 31 | 26 | 11 | Reached from comm. 2 comm.: 22, 44, 32, 62, 52 and 22 parents, adolescents |
| Workshops done by ICAS | 23 | 22 | 21 | 25 | 23 | 29 | Frequency is not related to the # of topics. Reached from comm. 2 comm.: 345, 330, 315, 375, 345 and 435 teens. |
* In Managua, the intervention work was done in communities, not in schools. Managua applied a cluster randomized controlled study in 6 communities. Interventions were carried out on schools in Cuenca (3) and in Cochabamba (12). This table displays only 6 of the schools in Cochabamba to make easier to compare
Source: Elaborated from documents of CERCA-A2 form
Failures of Monitoring
| 1) Planning |
| - No monitoring plan or no guideline to evaluate phase by phase |
| - No pilot to assess feasibility of intervention package, implementers’ skills, adequacy of data |
| - Interventions did not match predefined indicators |
| 2) Evaluation on how and to what extent the objectives are reached |
| - Emphasis on administrative and financial monitoring |
| - Data collected focused only on number of activities and reached people; rather than quality of service delivery or degree of behavior change |
| - Single monitoring format for countries with different interventions |
| - Monitoring did not include all objectives of the ToC |
| - Data collected had no feedback on intervention activities |
| 3) Identification of failures to produce outputs |
| - No monitoring to identify difficulties or flaws |
| - No monitoring to describe implementation challenges |
| - No report on mid-project adjustment of IP activities |
Impact evaluation: success and failure factors in CERCA
| Success | Failures |
|---|---|
| 1) Bolivia and Ecuador: Achieved modest behavioral change | 1) Data collected at t0 and t1 only for adolescents and not other stakeholders |
| 2) Reduced taboo, increased sensitization on SRH | 2) Inaccuracies in survey data collection |
| 3) Organized and improved community participation | 3) Not all data collected was used in the impact evaluation |
| 4) Bolivia and Ecuador: Expanded SRH networks | 4) Necessary first steps were omitted in the ToC; thus, not evaluated |
| 5) Tested Information and communication technology (ICT) to increase communication in SRH | 5) No multi-country intervention package but a common monitoring format that prevented good monitoring and evaluation |
| 6) Contributed to multi-country project design | 6) Cost-effectiveness was not assessed. Not all the activities were evaluated due to time and budget restrictions. |
Summary of lessons learned with the RBM analysis
| Summary of lessons learned |
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| - Review efficient interventions, what-why-how they worked |
| - Beware of time restrictions and cause-effect analysis for every activity of intervention |
| - Conduct a pilot intervention to test the intervention package within the RBM framework |
| - Keep a common intervention package and add activities when needed case-by case |
| - Make a specific plan for community participation based on CBPR |
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| - Design guidelines for every activity to ensure effective delivery of the content |
| - Monitor collection of data, phase of every activity, failures |
| - Standard monitoring is useful when same intervention package across multiple sites |
| - Obtain feedback on positive and negative aspects of IP and Monitoring |
| - Monitor all aspects (positive/negative) of each activity |
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| - Analyze success and failure factors to produce outputs/outcomes |
| - Evaluate the cost-effectiveness of every intervention |
| - Conduct a breakdown analysis of every intervention to understand the progress and particularities |
| - Preview time and budget to analyze lessons and determine the effective interventions |
Reviewed documents, classified by category and key elements of planning (1), monitoring (2), and impact evaluation (3)
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| CERCA Project proposal document, 2009 | 1 | |
| Crescendo Stat-Ghent, Quantitative evaluation of the CERCA Project. Ghent University. 2014 | 1 | |
| Ivanova O. et al. Lessons learnt from the CERCA Project, a multicomponent intervention to promote adolescent sexual and reproductive health in three Latin America countries: a qualitative post-hoc evaluation. Eval Program Plann-ELSEVIER. 2016, Jun13;58:98-105. | 1, 2, 3 | |
| Minutes of Cuenca meeting. 3-day meeting with country project leaders of the Consortium (February, 2014) | 2, 3 | |
| Minutes and recordings of Ghent meeting. 3-day meeting with country project leaders, researchers from Ghent and the study advisor from WHO-HRP (December, 2014) | 2, 3 | |
| Rojas Salazar M., Informe ESSA 2012, Análisis estadístico. En Revista Proyecto CERCA N°2. Estadísticas de Salud Sexual y Reproductiva en adolescentes Análisis de sus determinantes y Guía de Atención psicológica. Cochabamba | 2 | |
| Jaruseviciene L., Orozco M., Ibarra M., Cordova-Ossio F., Vega B., Auquilla N., Medina J., Gorter A., Decat P., De Meyer S., Temmerman M., Edmonds A., Valius L., Lazarus J. Primary healthcare providers’ views on improving sexual and reproductive healthcare for adolescents in Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua. Glob Health Action. 2013; 6: 10.3402/gha.v6i0.20444. Published online 2013 May 15. doi: 10.3402/gha.v6i0.20444. PMCID: PMC3656216. | 2 | |
| Decat, P. et al., 2015. Sexual onset and contraceptive use among adolescents from poor neighbourhoods in Managua, Nicaragua. Eur J Contracept Reprod Health Care., Mar 4; 20(2)(doi: 10.3109/13625187.2014.955846), p. 88–100. | 2 | |
| SMS-Multi-country guidelines, 2010 | 3 | |
| SRH workshops guidelines for Bolivia, 2010 | 3 | |
| CERCA-A2 form: List of activities done per country, 2014 | 3 | |
| (2) DOCUMENTS USED IN MONITORING: | Reviewed for key element | |
| Cordova-Pozo K. et al., Improving Adolescent Sexual Health in Latin America: reflections from an International Congress. Reproductive Health.2015, 12:11. DOI: 10.1186/1742-4755-12-11 | 1 | |
| Minutes and recordings of Ghent meeting. 3-day meeting with country project leaders, researchers from Ghent and the study advisor from WHO-HRP (December, 2014) | 1, 3 | |
| Monitoring: Report per activity | 2 | |
| Monitoring: Summary of Activities per trimester | 2 | |
| Monitoring: Summary of Activities per semester | 2 | |
| Data collected at health care facilities from 2010 to 2013, to track the number of adolescents that visited the health care facility | 2 | |
| Manuscripts for quality evaluation to CERCA from key informants: 2014 | 3 | |
| (3) DOCUMENTS USED IN IMPACT EVALUATION: | Reviewed for key element | |
| Minutes of Cuenca meeting. 3-day meeting with country project leaders of the Consortium (February, 2014) | 1 | |
| Minutes and recordings of Ghent meeting. 3-day meeting with country project leaders, researchers from Ghent and the study advisor from WHO-HRP (December, 2014) | 1 | |
| CERCA-A2 form: List of activities done per country, 2014 | 1 | |
| CERCA Project proposal document, 2009 | 2 | |
| Ivanova O. et al. Lessons learnt from the CERCA Project, a multicomponent intervention to promote adolescent sexual and reproductive health in three Latin America countries: a qualitative post-hoc evaluation. Eval Program Plann-ELSEVIER. 2016, Jun13;58:98-105. | 2 | |
| Assessment report on internet for awareness raising activities, South Group, CERCA Project. 2014. | 2 | |
| Cordova-Pozo K. and Hagens A.J.J., Information and Communications Technology in Sexual and reproductive health care for Adolescents - A Bolivian Case Study. In Proceedings of the 2nd Annual Global Healthcare Conference: 2014; Singapore. Published by GSTF. July, 2013. ISSN: 2251-3833. Singapore | 2, 3 | |
| Nelson, E., Edmonds, A., Ballesteros, M., Encalada Soto, D., & Rodriguez, O. The unintended consequences of sex education: an ethnography of a development intervention in Latin America. Anthropology & Medicine, 21(2), 189-201. DOI: 10.1080/13648470.2014.918932 | 2 | |
| Michielsen, K. et al., Effectiveness of complex interventions: Post hoc examination of the design, implementation and evaluation of the CERCA project to understand the results it achieved, Ghent: ICRH, Ghent University. 2015 | 2 | |
| CERCA Project proposal document, 2009 | 3 |
Objectives of activities per country, percentage of effort and coverage
| Intervention Package | Objectives of Intervention | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Improve access and reception to accurate information | Improve Ease discussing SRH | Improve condom contraception use | Improve use of health services | % of effort* | % of coverage ** | |
| BOLIVIA: Activities for adolescents. Target 2000 adolescents in 12 schools | ||||||
| Email on SRH | x | 13.5% | 25% | |||
| Bidirectional text messages (ICT) | x | x | 13.5% | 75% | ||
| Workshops in SRH | x | x | x | x | 67% | 100% |
| Private health consultations (Pilot study) | x | x | x | x | 6% | 18% |
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| ECUADOR: Activities for adolescents. Target 2000 adolescents in 3 schools | ||||||
| Sport activities | x | 3% | 23% | |||
| Cinema on SRH | x | 3% | 6% | |||
| SRH Fair | x | 3% | 8% | |||
| Email on SRH (ICT) | x | 7% | 4% | |||
| Text messages (ICT) | x | x | 2% | 4% | ||
| Private health consultations | x | x | x | x | 1% | 0.8% |
| Workshops in SRH | x | x | x | x | 81% | 639% |
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| NICARAGUA: Activities for adolescents. Target 1500 adolescents in 6 communities | ||||||
| FOY training to the community | x | x | x | x | 44% | 65% |
| Foro cinema on SRH | x | 19% | 23% | |||
| FOY training to couples | x | x | x | x | 17% | 3% |
| Workshops done by ICAS | x | x | x | x | 20% | 20% |
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* % of effort was calculated by adding the total number of times each activity was carried out over the total activities in the country
** Coverage is calculated as the percentage of those in the target age group (adolescents) who were effectively reached with each activity
Source: Elaborated from documents of CERCA-A2 form