Starting with the Classroom: Updating Family Planning Knowledge in East Africa |
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Voices from the Capacity Project In East Africa, a dedicated midwifery tutor is working hard to train students but worries that she isn’t teaching them the latest information and techniques. Many of her fellow instructors are in the same situation. “We had our last refresher training ten years ago,†she laments.
To build instructors’ capacity and address the knowledge gaps, the Capacity Project partnered with East, Central and Southern Africa (ECSA) Health Community and Africa’s Health in 2010 to deliver a week-long workshop on Contemporary Issues in Family Planning for midwifery tutors in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. Held in Dar es Salaam in April 2008, the workshop updated the knowledge of 22 tutors and enabled them to teach their students more effectively. A quantitative and qualitative evaluation showed the workshop to be highly successful. Average scores climbed from 58% on the pre-test to 81% on the post-test.
“We have already incorporated the contraceptive technology updates [from the workshop] into the training curricula (Certificate and Diploma Nursing curricula), and we are also planning to update the Advanced Diploma and Degree Nursing curricula,†explains a nursing officer from the Tanzania Ministry of Health and Social Welfare. After the workshop, a lecturer from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in Tanzania was eager to get started: “The students were still doing their clinical MCH [maternal and child health] rotations, so I discussed with them about quality improvement in family planning services using the six dimensions assessment tool and root cause analysis. They were assigned to make an assessment of these two clinics and make presentations and discussions with the clinic staff. They did so, and the clinic staff were very cooperative and happy to have their feedback. They concluded that some areas were within the facility level of improvement and agreed to work on them. I now feel very comfortable teaching family planning to my students.â€
Going forward, a CD of family planning training materials used in the workshop is being disseminated to support instructors and practitioners in Anglophone Africa. The Capacity Project is providing organizational support and technical assistance to the Kitui campus of Kenya Medical Training College, one of the training institutions represented in the workshop, with the goal of helping it to become a Center of Family Planning Excellence in the region. A lecturer from Tumaini University makes a final point: “Thank you for the Handbook [Family Planning: A Global Handbook for Providers]; it is now a key reference for obstetricians and gynecologists in our hospital. We handle it like an egg!†[February 2009. Print a PDF version.] The Capacity Project, funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and implemented by IntraHealth International and partners (IMA, Jhpiego, LATH, MSH, PATH, TRG), helps developing countries strengthen human resources for health to better respond to the challenges of implementing and sustaining quality health programs. The Voices from the Capacity Project series is made possible by the support of the American people through USAID. The contents are the responsibility of IntraHealth International and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government. |