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Evidence-Based Development of Health and Family Planning Programs in Bangladesh and Ghana
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"This paper describes two initiatives that have used experimental studies toguide the development of community-based health and family planning programmes.In Bangladesh and Ghana, factorial experiments were implemented in stages. Anexploratory phase developed a service system for community-based health care; anexperimental phase assessed the demographic impact of the system; a replicationphase examined the transferability of the experimental programme to a non-researchsetting; and a scaling-up phase facilitated the extension of the new system to thenational health care programme.
All stages were guided by research, with questions, mechanisms, and outcomes shifting as the process developed. Large-scale systems development was achieved in both Bangladesh and Ghana, not because the scalingup programs were alike, but because similar research approaches informed their strategies, allowing them to adapt to contrasting societal and institutional contexts. Success in Bangladesh and Ghana suggests ways in which evidence-based system development can overcome resource and organisational constraints and foster transitions from limited, passive clinical services to active programmes for providing accessible community-based care."
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"This paper describes two initiatives that have used experimental studies toguide the development of community-based health and family planning programmes.In Bangladesh and Ghana, factorial experiments were implemented in stages. Anexploratory phase developed a service system for community-based health care; anexperimental phase assessed the demographic impact of the system; a replicationphase examined the transferability of the experimental programme to a non-researchsetting; and a scaling-up phase facilitated the extension of the new system to thenational health care programme.
All stages were guided by research, with questions, mechanisms, and outcomes shifting as the process developed. Large-scale systems development was achieved in both Bangladesh and Ghana, not because the scalingup programs were alike, but because similar research approaches informed their strategies, allowing them to adapt to contrasting societal and institutional contexts. Success in Bangladesh and Ghana suggests ways in which evidence-based system development can overcome resource and organisational constraints and foster transitions from limited, passive clinical services to active programmes for providing accessible community-based care."
Click here to download the report in PDF.
Due to technical reason beyond the control of Soul Beat Africa, some PDFs may not open in some browsers. We suggest that you contact the organisation directly , or try another browser.
Number of Pages
52
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