Abstract

Integration of family planning and immunization services provides an opportunity to meet women's need for postpartum family planning and infants' vaccination needs through client-centered care, while reducing financial and opportunity costs for families. The United States Agency for International Development's Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP) supported the Liberia Ministry of Health to scale up integrated family planning and immunization services as part of a broader service delivery and health systems recovery program after the Ebola epidemic. We conducted a mixed-methods program evaluation in 22 health facilities in Grand Bassa and Lofa counties. Family planning uptake and immunization dropout rates at project sites were compared to rates at 18 matched health facilities in the same counties. We conducted 34 focus group discussions with community members and 43 key informant interviews with health care providers and managers to explore quality of care and contextual factors affecting provision and use of integrated services including postpartum family planning. From November 2016 to July 2017, 1,066 women accepted referrals from immunization to family planning counseling (10% of all vaccinator-caregiver interactions); the majority of women who were referred (75%) accepted a family planning method the same day. Trends indicated slightly higher family planning uptake in intervention over nonintervention facilities, but differences were not statistically significant. Pentavalent vaccine dropout rates did not increase in intervention compared to nonintervention facilities indicating no negative impact on utilization of immunization services. Clients and providers expressed that the integrated services reduced costs and time for the clients, educated mothers about postpartum family planning, and ensured infants were completing their vaccinations. Providers expressed the need for increased human resources to meet the elevated demand for family planning counseling services and additional focus on community-level social and behavior change activities. Both groups emphasized that social stigma and norms about postpartum sexual abstinence prevented many women from seeking postpartum family planning services. Although scaling up integrated family planning-immunization services may be programmatically feasible and acceptable to clients and providers, the intervention's success and ability to understand and quantify impact are driven by the effect of contextual factors and fidelity to the intervention approach. Contextual factors need to be understood before implementation, measured during implementation, and addressed throughout implementation to maximize the approach's impact on service utilization and health outcomes.

Highlights

  • Integration of family planning and immunization services provides an opportunity to meet women’s need for postpartum family planning and infants’ vaccination needs through client-centered care, while reducing financial and opportunity costs for families

  • A few factors limited our ability to detect statistically significant changes in overall family planning outcomes, including (1) the use of “total family planning users” as the primary outcome of interest, (2) not tracking lactational amenorrhea method (LAM) users in the number of total family planning users, (3) the small sample size as a result of small health facility catchment areas and client loads, and possibly, (4) the reduced intensity of supervision for this intervention through this scaled approach compared to the Maternal and Child Health Integrated Program (MCHIP) approach

  • This study demonstrates that scaling up integrated family planning-immunization services may be programmatically feasible and acceptable to clients and providers, the success of the intervention and ability to understand and quantify impact are driven by the effect of contextual factors and fidelity to www.ghspjournal.org the intervention approach

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Summary

Introduction

Integration of family planning and immunization services provides an opportunity to meet women’s need for postpartum family planning and infants’ vaccination needs through client-centered care, while reducing financial and opportunity costs for families. The United States Agency for International Development’s Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP) supported the Liberia Ministry of Health to scale up integrated family planning and immunization services as part of a broader service delivery and health systems recovery program after the Ebola epidemic. Global Health: Science and Practice 2019 | Volume 7 | Number 3 system, Liberia’s maternal mortality ratio and child mortality rate were among the highest in the world, at 1,072 deaths per 100,000 live births and 94 deaths per 1,000 live births, respectively.[1] An analysis of data from 21 low- and middle-income countries demonstrated that 61% of all postpartum women have an unmet need for contraception.[2] In Liberia, one-third of all married women have an unmet need.[1] the overall modern contraceptive prevalence rate increased from

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