应用以人为本的设计来复制青少年性健康和生殖健康干预措施:肯尼亚 Binti Shupavu 案例研究》。

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Global Health: Science and Practice Pub Date : 2023-12-22 DOI:10.9745/GHSP-D-22-00557
Nancy Njoki, Meghan Cutherell, Abednego Musau, David Mireri, Alex Nana-Sinkam, Mary Phillips
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们介绍了一项案例研究,该研究描述了如何利用以人为本的设计(HCD)来确定如何将现有的针对 4 个地区(埃塞俄比亚、尼日利亚北部、尼日利亚南部和坦桑尼亚)少女的避孕药具摄取计划中的干预内容调整到肯尼亚使用。首先,我们利用牺牲概念对现有的干预内容进行了优先排序,以便在肯尼亚进行测试。通过这些概念,我们确定了关键见解和行为原型,并据此建立了保真度更高的原型,充分利用现有的计划知识和资源,同时响应肯尼亚少女的独特机遇。经过两轮原型设计,我们推出了旨在提高女孩避孕率的高保真干预措施。在早期实施过程中,我们利用项目经验确定了改进策略。最终设计出的 "Binti Shupavu "模式旨在挖掘女孩的愿望,将她们与避孕药具的使用联系起来,建立她们对医疗系统的信任,并与有影响力的人合作,按照全球用户历程,为青少年避孕药具的使用提供支持。在实施的第一年(2022 年 1 月至 12 月),干预措施从 90 个设施扩展到 360 个设施,惠及 60 111 名 10-19 岁的少女。其中,21698 人是新的自愿避孕者(36%),另有 3873 人(19%)是持续使用者。我们的设计过程表明,HCD 是一种很有前途的工具,可用于指导推广工作。对用户观点的强调、测试学习和合作促进了对新用户人群的深入了解,从而指导计划设计者在使用现有内容和根据人群独特需求开发新内容之间取得平衡。最后,如果设计团队能够得到国家、地区和全球专家的支持,了解并利用早期工作的证据和实施经验,那么人类发展就有可能支持本地化议程。
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Applying Human-Centered Design to Replicate an Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Intervention: A Case Study of Binti Shupavu in Kenya.

We present a case study describing the use of human-centered design (HCD) to determine how to adapt intervention components from an existing contraceptive uptake program for adolescent girls in 4 geographical contexts (Ethiopia, northern Nigeria, southern Nigeria, and Tanzania) for use in Kenya. First, we prioritized existing intervention components to be tested in Kenya using sacrificial concepts. Through these concepts, we identified key insights and behavioral archetypes from which to build higher-fidelity prototypes, leveraging existing program knowledge and resources while responding to unique opportunities for Kenyan adolescent girls. After 2 rounds of prototyping, we launched a high-fidelity intervention designed to improve contraceptive uptake among girls. We used program experience to identify strategies for improvement during early implementation. The resulting model, Binti Shupavu, is designed to tap into girls' aspirations and connect them with contraceptive use, build their trust in the health system, and work with influencers to build support for adolescent contraceptive use, following the global user journey. In the first year of implementation (January-December 2022), the intervention was scaled from 90 facilities to 360 facilities and reached 60,111 adolescent girls aged 10-19 years. Of these, 21,698 were new voluntary contraceptive users (36%) and an additional 3,873 (19%) were continuing users.Our design process suggests that HCD is a promising tool for navigating replication. The emphasis on users' perspectives, testing to learn, and collaboration facilitated a deep understanding of the new user population, thus guiding program designers to balance using existing components with developing new ones based on the population's unique needs. Finally, HCD has potential to support the localization agenda if design teams are supported by national, regional, and global experts to be aware of and use the evidence and implementation experience from earlier work.

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来源期刊
Global Health: Science and Practice
Global Health: Science and Practice Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
7.50%
发文量
178
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Health: Science and Practice (GHSP) is a no-fee, open-access, peer-reviewed, online journal aimed to improve health practice, especially in low- and middle-income countries. Our goal is to reach those who design, implement, manage, evaluate, and otherwise support health programs. We are especially interested in advancing knowledge on practical program implementation issues, with information on what programs entail and how they are implemented. GHSP is currently indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, POPLINE, EBSCO, SCOPUS,. the Web of Science Emerging Sources Citation Index, and the USAID Development Experience Clearinghouse (DEC). TOPICS: Issued four times a year, GHSP will include articles on all global health topics, covering diverse programming models and a wide range of cross-cutting issues that impact and support health systems. Examples include but are not limited to: Health: Addiction and harm reduction, Child Health, Communicable and Emerging Diseases, Disaster Preparedness and Response, Environmental Health, Family Planning/Reproductive Health, HIV/AIDS, Malaria, Maternal Health, Neglected Tropical Diseases, Non-Communicable Diseases/Injuries, Nutrition, Tuberculosis, Water and Sanitation. Cross-Cutting Issues: Epidemiology, Gender, Health Communication/Healthy Behavior, Health Policy and Advocacy, Health Systems, Human Resources/Training, Knowledge Management, Logistics and Supply Chain Management, Management and Governance, mHealth/eHealth/digital health, Monitoring and Evaluation, Scale Up, Youth.
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