The proposed operations research study is designed to evaluate a package of family planning services and related behavior change interventions aimed at addressing the unmet need for family planning in postpartum women, integrated with an ongoing maternal and newborn health program, and to assess the program's impact (1) on knowledge of healthy fertility practices, (2) on contraceptive use prevalence in women during the postpartum period, (3) on postpartum birth spacing, and (4) to examine the feasibility and sustainability of the proposed integrated service delivery approach. The study will have a quasi-experimental design, with evaluation primarily through household surveys in four intervention unions and four comparison unions (unions are lowest local government entities with an average population of about 20,000) in rural Sylhet District, Bangladesh.
The specific objectives of this operations research are: 1. Integrated Family Planning/Maternal Neonatal Health Intervention: To develop and test an integrated Family Planning and Maternal and Neonatal Health (FP/MNH) service delivery approach in the Bangladesh setting, building on the ongoing Projahnmo study. Intervention activities will include behaviour change communications on healthy timing and spacing of pregnancy, couples counseling, social networking and expansion of contraceptive options for postpartum women, including provision of oral contraceptive pills and condoms in the home. 2. Integrated Service Delivery Approach: To assess the strengths and limitations of integrating family planning into an ongoing community-based maternal and newborn care program. 1. To compare the quality of counseling provided by CHWs in the integrated (MNH+FP) intervention arm versus regular (MNH) control arm in Sylhet district, Bangladesh 2. To assess the knowledge of CHWs providing integrated (MNH+FP) counseling in the intervention arm versus CHWs providing regular MNH counseling in the control arm in Sylhet district, Bangladesh 3. To determine factors that affect the quality of care provided by CHWs in both the intervention and control arms in Sylhet district, Bangladesh
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6,916
Integrate post-partum family planning education and counselling into 2nd Antenatal Home visit by CHW (at approximately 32 weeks of pregnancy) Integrate post-partum family planning education and counselling into post-partum visits by CHWs during first month Continue providing family planning education and counselling to women through CHW home visits after first month. Promote discussion and acceptance of post-partum family planning methods among key household members. Facility level Ensure availability of postpartum contraceptive methods such as progestin-only pill. Ensure availability of post-partum family planning and post-natal services. Community level Increase community awareness of the importance of birth spacing and benefits of LAM Educate influential community members on the importance of birth spacing and benefits of LAM.
A comparison area received standard government health services.
Proportion of enrolled women (15-49 yrs) using a contraceptive method at 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30 and 36 months
Determine the impact of the maternal and neonatal health (MNH) intervention package on the contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) among enrolled women (15-49 yrs) at 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30 and 36 months among the study sample. CPR is defined as the number of enrolled women using a contraceptive method divided by the total number of women enrolled at a point in time.
Time frame: 5 years
Probability of a subsequent birth within 24 months of index birth
Probability of a subsequent birth within 24 months from the index birth assessed by the lifetable method in enrolled women (15-49 yrs) among the study sample.
Time frame: 5 years
Percentage of enrolled women with short birth intervals
Percentage of enrolled women (15-49 yrs) with short birth intervals (birth-interval \<24 months between the index child and any subsequent births) among the study sample.
Time frame: 5 years
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