By: Judy Mwangi, Regional Monitoring Advisor, Population Services International
One of the functions of the Self-Care Trailblazer Group (SCTG) is to ensure the institutionalization of self-care policies and financing at national and subnational levels and increase demand and accountability for self-care among target communities and constituencies. This work is only possible if we continuously monitor our progress in every community to adapt and maximize our impact.
To operationalize this, the SCTG works collaboratively with the National Self-Care Networks (NSNs) in five countries: Kenya, Uganda, Nigeria, Senegal, and Ethiopia. The NSNs pursue priorities in self-care policy and advocacy and, together with the global SCTG, develop learning mechanisms to inform the extent to which national self-care guidelines promote scale-up of quality, affordable self-care for those in need.
To help monitor the status of self-care policy and implementation in each country, the SCTG developed and piloted a tool verified and endorsed by the Ministry of Health-led technical working groups (TWGs). The tool acts as a data source for generating and synthesizing information for use by Ministries of Health, donors, and other SCTG stakeholders.
About the tool: Developed with Microsoft Excel, this tool includes guidance for use, a donor and SCTG results framework for reference, and a template for uploading the data. The template allows the NSNs to list in-country stakeholders participating in the information-gathering process during each reporting cycle, their role in the TWG, and their contact details. Although the NSNs are in charge of completing this dashboard, involving all stakeholders responsible for the technical and thematic areas at various levels is vital for a national perspective and ownership in implementation.
The tool also provides a platform to track updates on the six thematic areas of self-care consisting of:
- Overall health/sexual reproductive health and rights (SRHR);
- HIV testing;
- Contraception;
- Self-managed abortion;
- Other SRHR services;
- Non-communicable diseases.
Under each thematic area, there are five technical areas of focus:
- Laws/legislation and policies;
- Regulatory approvals;
- Service delivery;
- Current practice in the community;
- Political commitment, enfolding funding, and related commitments.
When the NSNs began using the dashboard in December 2021, they conducted desk reviews and summarized their country’s baseline self-care status. This information also included barriers, anticipated challenges, and opposition to self-care in the country. These outputs helped the national TWGs develop performance indicators and benchmarks for each thematic and technical area.
Roles and responsibilities. The NSNs are mandated to complete the tool bi-annually (December and June). The NSNs convene critical stakeholders in self-care, including members of the Ministry of Health-led TWG, for data collation and verification before submitting the dashboards.
Dashboard development process
The SCTG initiated the dashboard development and implementation process by working with the Center for Health, Human Rights and Development, the NSN in Uganda, to serve as a pilot. The process involved agreeing on expectations, the overall strategy and timelines, an in-country TWG forum with diverse stakeholders, completion of the dashboard, and finally, a sharing and feedback process.
What have we learned from using the dashboard?
Stakeholder participation is paramount. The SCTG and NSNs contribute to achieving UHC goals in each country. It is essential to position Ministries of Health to take the lead role to secure their commitment and buy-in for decisions made. Leveraging diverse stakeholders’ participation optimizes their support to implement the TWGs recommendations for scale-up implementation of self-care interventions.
Technical expertise is required. The tool involves contributions from technical experts in each health area for up-to-date information specific to each thematic and technical area. Following the main stakeholder meeting, it helps to include a step before submission to validate or clarify information from subject matter heads who have yet to participate. Engaging consultants helps to better articulate content during initial contextual analysis (baseline) and the biannual updates. NSNs are advised to budget for this as part of the project activities.
What have we gained, and how does this support the future of self-care?
The country monitoring dashboard initiative has helped countries better appreciate national self-care policies, interventions, and priorities. It has elevated the visibility and composition of the stakeholder working groups with the potential for closer collaboration at the country level and beyond. The teams are positioned to hold each other accountable, follow up, and advocate to progress self-care interventions with MOH and other players.
Using the monitoring dashboards, five countries – Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Senegal and Uganda – have revised their national policy guidelines to enable integration and implementation of self-care in key thematic areas (contraception, HIV testing, and other SRHR areas). Across the board, there is increasing adoption of the self-care guidelines at sub-national levels and revision or policy advocacy in task shifting, so that additional cadres, like pharmacists and community health workers can serve as touch points for self-care in support of expanded access and scale-upscale up of service delivery.
SCTG, together with NSNs, are exploring how to make the country monitoring dashboard more user-friendly, both as a data entry and analytical tool, how to harmonize and standardize measures and identify opportunities to link the policy monitoring dashboard to existing tools, such as Health Management Information Systems or HMIS. The SCTG Evidence & Learning Working Group is piloting this process with the Federal Ministry of Health in Nigeria through the local NSN, White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria.
With these next steps, the country monitoring dashboard can strengthen the measurement, optimization, and localization of our self-care interventions to ensure access to self-care for those in need.