There have been attempts at developing programmes and interventions to address key challenges related to a lack of adolescent-friendly health services, limited access to age-appropriate counselling services, promotion of a healthy lifestyle, and menstrual management facilities at the school, both in the government and non-state sectors for quite some time. These programmes have mostly been on a small scale, localised and fragmented. A study has been done to fill in this knowledge gap by conducting a situation analysis on AH/SRH and identifying past and present programmes that have been highly effective and impactful.
The
study adopted multiple methods for collecting data: i) a Scoping review of relevant documents to get a ‘snap shot’ of the current situation;
ii) a Qualitative study including
Key Informant Interviews (KIIs) with stakeholders at district and central levels,
In-depth Interviews (IDIs) with programme participants, and Focus Group
Discussions (FGDs) with members of the beneficiary community; iii)
Observational case studies based on
field visits to selected programme sites, and iv) feedback from a deliberative workshop with the
stakeholders to share and discuss findings.
Data
were collected from 11 purposively selected sub-districts (of eight districts,
one district per division) during Jan. – Mar. 2022. The sub-districts were
selected based upon programme concentration and discussion with DGHS/DGFP of
MoHFW, MoE, and MoWCA. A total of 39 IDIs, 34 KIIs, 9 FGDs, and 18 case
observations were done. Finally, a stakeholder
deliberative dialogue with key stakeholders at the central level was organised
on 30th May 2022 at BRAC Centre Inn Dhaka.
Here
are some glimpses from the findings:
·
In the
study, 28 Adolescent SRH programmes were reviewed by the study team. Findings
reveal that BRAC was a pioneer in implementing programmes for adolescent girls
since the ‘90s as part of its women empowerment mission, e.g., BRAC Adolescent
Development Programme (1993) and APON (1998). This was followed by UNICEF at
the beginning of the millennium (Kishori Abhijan, 2001) and then the government
(Adolescent-friendly Health Corners, DGHS/MoHFW, 2011).
·
An attempt was made to identify
some impactful (and scalable) AH/SRH programmes based on the scoping review and
perspectives of the programme implementers and beneficiaries. For example, child
marriage interventions improved awareness about the problems of early
marriage, including the legal age of marriage for girls and its rationale. Some
interventions positively affected unmarried girls’ preference for marriage at
20 years of age or later and increased their confidence in negotiating with
their parents to delay marriage.
·
Menstrual
hygiene management programmes
helped to improve relevant knowledge and use of health products and services as
intended by the programmes. Findings show that additional
focus on male family members, especially fathers, was helpful to improve the utilisation
of MHM products.
·
Some Nutrition programmes
successfully improved nutrition practices and shifted gender dynamics at
household and community levels, beside improving knowledge of nutrition and its
practical implications in everyday life. Some
·
Programmes focusing on gender-based
violence achieved reasonable awareness of the participants around domestic
and intimate-partner violence, harassment, rape and acid throwing etc.
·
Findings
show that in-school girls developed better gender-equitable attitudes than
their out-of-school peers. Some programmes achieved a higher percentage of
married adolescents using modern contraceptive methods.
·
Educational interventions enhanced
access to AH/SRH knowledge and helped lower the barrier for adolescents to
access information, counselling, and sexual and reproductive health services.
·
Common enabling factors for adolescent health/SRH programmes (all countries including Bangladesh): Analysis of the data identified common factors underlying the success (based on outcome/impact) as follows: i) use of multiple platforms (schools, health facilities, community outreach) for service delivery (Bangladesh, India); ii) community engagement and participation (Bangladesh, Nepal, India); iii) regular monitoring and evaluation (Bangladesh, India, Nepal); iv) capacity-building of programme implementers and participants (India, Nepal, Sri Lanka); v) youth engagement (Pakistan, Nepal); vi) involving peer groups to share/disseminate information (Nepal. Pakistan, India); vii) use of digital platforms (Bangladesh, Nepal, India); viii) establishing adolescent-specific service delivery outlets (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka).·
Common challenges for adolescent
health/SRH programmes (all countries including Bangladesh)
Supply-side
challenges include i)
socio-cultural and
religious barriers to discussing sensitive issues like SRH issues publicly; ii) shortage of trained/skilled service
providers, including mental health counsellors; iii) poor programme documentation
and regular programme M & E; iv) poor coordination among the ministries,
agencies and stakeholders in the government and non-state sectors.
Demand-side
challenges include i) resistance emerging from
traditional norms and tribal culture, parents and xcommunity gate-keepers,
religious leaders etc. while disseminating sensitive information; ii) economic
barriers to access AH/SRH services by the adolescents; iii) lack of support
from the family and community due to poor awareness of the parents on AH/SRH
issues; iv) Social and psychological barriers emerging from shyness and
relative loneliness of the adolescents; v) negative perception of the parents
and others on mental health counselling; vi) outreach for the school dropouts
and out-of-school adolescents.
·
Based on
evidence generated through the study, we summarise what worked and did not work
during the implementation of these programmes to inform the future design of a
comprehensive AH/SRH programme:
o
a) What worked: Enabling
factors
Evidence generated through the
study identified the following common enabling factors for the success of the
AH/SRH programmes in the studied countries, including Bangladesh: use of the health
facility, school and community-based platforms in combination for service
delivery, buying in the social gate-keepers including religious leaders,
engaging the community to participate in co-designing the interventions,
continuous M & E using measurable indicators, supply and demand-side
capacity building, incorporation of life-skills and income generation
activities in the AH/SRH programme, and peer-to-peer approach for building awareness
on relevant issues.
o b) What did
not work: challenges to be addressed
Some common
challenges identified through the study across the selected countries,
including Bangladesh are: lack of coordination among various
ministries/implementing organisations and poor integration of services, limited
implementation capacity, shortage of resources, including trained human
resources, lack of motivation of field staff, infrastructural challenges,
absence of age-specific customized programme design, poor programme
documentation, non-inclusiveness and frequent dropouts of adolescents, cultural
and religious barriers raised by the family/society/community, gender
insensitivity, time-bound project nature of the programmes without
sustainability plans etc.
·
Current
gaps in AH/SRH programmes in Bangladesh
Some of the
gaps in the AH/SRH programmes in Bangladesh identified through the study are: limited
geographical coverage and age-specific intervention; lack of programme inclusivity for disadvantaged
adolescents, AH/SRH component strategically bundled with other interventions;
younger adolescents (10-14 years), unmarried girls and adolescent boys are less
covered in the current programmes; limited programme documentation and poor and
irregular M & E, experiences of
scale-up not documented to inform future programme modifications; lack of
sustainability plans once current funding stops; frequent dropout of field
level staffs, volunteers, adolescent participants; lack of model effectiveness
testing initiatives etc.
·
Based on evidence generated from
the study, the following recommendations are made for developing a
comprehensive AH/SRH programme in Bangladesh:
·
Build coordination and
collaboration among the ministries and agencies involved
in implementing AH/SRH interventions and with the non-state sectors to expand
outreach and avoid duplication and overlaps.
·
Strategic partnership with sectors
beyond health as the diverse needs of adolescents cannot
be addressed by the health sector alone. Synergistic action with
other sectors and stakeholders such as education, social welfare
and media is crucial, especially for vulnerability reduction and ‘leaving no
one behind’.
·
Ensure equity and inclusivity to
reach the hitherto un-reached adolescent groups such as
disabled, marginalised population, LGBT and transgender community, CSWs,
street-dwellers, remote and hard-to-reach areas, tea-garden etc. The programme
design needs to be flexible to accommodate the different needs of these diverse
groups.
·
The interventions need to be gender-sensitive;
the programme design should be such that it can address the different needs of
the two sexes. For example, ensuring female
physicians for female adolescents especially married adolescents.
Ensure privacy and confidentiality while providing services.
·
Increase demand for AH/SRH
services by ensuring an adolescent-friendly
service environment in the AFHCs; Instead of
the AFHC-based approach, think of a life-course approach to deliver
age-specific integrated services to overcome fragmentation and provide ‘one-stop’
services.
·
Use multiple platforms,
including digital platforms, for service delivery to target adolescents for
maximum impact; ensure active engagement of the
adolescents, the catchment community and its gatekeepers, including religious
leaders, in
programme design and implementation.
·
It is also necessary for the
non-state sectors to establish relations and communication with relevant formal
institutions and govt. agencies, civil society organisations and regulatory
authorities for programme buy-in from the early phase of programme designing.
·
Enhance capacity of the service
providers across with necessary skills and training to deliver integrated
services at scale. Training informal CTC (Close-to-Community)
providers and developing strategies to enable better links and coordination
between this community-embedded cadre and the formal health sector has the
potential to reduce service costs and improve the availability of quality SRH
(and other) care at the community level.
·
Develop mental
health workforce for different tiers e.g., clinical psychologists, and
clinical social psychiatrists, to fill in the gaps in counselling
services.
·
Ensure
proper programme documentation and programme M & E to inform future
course correction as needed for being relevant. Monitoring of AH service utilisation based on the
indicators used in DHIS 2.
·
Ensure sustainability beyond
programme duration by increasing investment in adolescent health/SRH
programmes, and establishing linkages with mainstream health systems for
integrated service delivery and sustainability.
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Healthy families are the foundation for healthy communities, and through the Sustainable Development Goals, the world has made a promise of universal health coverage and health for all.
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