实施生育关怀:冈比亚参与式研讨会的启示。

IF 2.8 Q2 REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY Reproduction & fertility Pub Date : 2024-11-07 Print Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1530/RAF-24-0029
Anna Afferri, Susan Dierickx, Mustapha Bittaye, Musa Marena, Sainey M Ceesay, Haddy Bittaye, Allan A Pacey, And Julie Balen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:西非冈比亚最近在不孕不育方面取得了进展,这是性健康和生殖健康中落后于其他国家的一个组成部分。自 2016 年以来,不孕不育研究以及与国家利益相关方和关注不孕不育问题的当地民间社会组织建立的合作伙伴关系营造了有利的政策环境。在此,我们将报告冈比亚不孕不育政策实施参与式研讨会的成果,并就在资源有限的环境中确定国家生育关怀优先事项提供见解:方法:我们举办了一次参与式研讨会,来自冈比亚公共和私营卫生部门的 29 人参加了研讨会。利用选定的参与式小组工作工具,各利益相关方在五个预先确定的行动领域框架内确定了关键活动并排定了优先次序,这些领域包括:(i) 制定指南/法规;(ii) 记录/报告数据;(iii) 建立公私合作伙伴关系;(iv) 培训医疗服务提供者;(v) 提高意识和寻求健康:根据短期、中期和长期时间框架,在五个行动领域提出了 17 项优先活动。通过小组共识,从整个活动库中进一步确定了三项活动的优先次序。通过阐明每项活动及其预期成果之间的联系、循环和纽带,小组建模活动帮助设想了活动的复杂性:参与式研讨会为冈比亚的生育关怀确定了可行的干预措施,利益相关者为今后的工作指明了方向。尽管存在挑战,但冈比亚的政策制定者、从业人员、研究人员和活动家必须继续参与,努力从政策制定转向政策实施。通过有效合作和财政支持,改善冈比亚和其他低收入国家的生育保健是可行的。
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FERTILITY CARE IN LOW AND MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES: Implementing fertility care: insights from a participatory workshop in The Gambia.

Introduction: The Gambia, West Africa, has made recent progress on infertility, a component of sexual and reproductive health that is lagging behind others. Since 2016, there is favourable policy environment stemming from infertility research and partnership building with national stakeholders and local civil society organisations focussing on infertility. Here, we report outcomes from a participatory workshop on infertility policy implementation in The Gambia and provide insights on setting national priorities for fertility care in resource-limited settings.

Methods: We conducted a participatory workshop involving 29 participants from Gambia's public and private health sectors. Using selected participatory group work tools, stakeholders identified and prioritised key activities within the framework of five pre-defined areas of action, including (i) creating guidelines/regulations; (ii) recording/reporting data; (iii) building public-private partnerships; (iv) training health providers; and (v) raising awareness and health-seeking.

Results: A total of 17 prioritised activities were proposed across the five action areas, according to short-, medium-, and long-term timeframes. Three were further prioritised from the overall pool, through group consensus. A group model building activity helped to envision the complexity by elucidating links, loops, and connections between each activity and their expected outcomes.

Conclusions: The participatory workshop identified actionable interventions for fertility care in The Gambia, with stakeholders setting a clear path ahead. Despite challenges, the continued engagement of Gambian policymakers, practitioners, researchers, and activists in efforts to move beyond policy creation to its implementation is essential. Improving fertility care in The Gambia and other low- and middle-income countries is feasible with effective collaboration and financial support.

Lay summary: In The Gambia, a partnership of stakeholders from various domains, including research, grassroots activism, clinicians, and policymakers, contributed to an increased awareness of infertility. This, in turn, led to the inclusion of infertility in the national reproductive health strategic plan. An in-country participatory workshop involving participants from both public and private health sectors was held in October 2023 with the objective of identifying priorities for moving beyond planning to implementation, within the context of resource constraints. The top three identified priorities were: (i) training about infertility for health providers; (ii) harmonisation of data collection; and (iii) the development of clinical guidelines for infertility management. It is important for the Gambian Ministry of Health to implement these proposed locally relevant fertility care activities. Despite current and future challenges, having a clear vision and pathway will help establish fertility care in the country, with Gambia potentially leading the way among many other countries.

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