15 research outputs found

    Integrating Health Care to Meet the Needs of the Mother–Infant Pair: A Call for Papers for Year 3 of the Maternal Health Task Force–PLOS Collection

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    The Maternal Health Task Force (MHTF) and PLOS Medicine issue the call for papers for Year 3 of the MHTF-PLOS Collection: Integrating Health Care to Meet the Needs of the Mother–Infant Pair. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summar

    Business not as usual: how multisectoral collaboration can promote transformative change for health and sustainable development.

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    • We present a model of enabling fac-tors for effective multisectoral collabo-ration for improvements in health and sustainable development. • Drive change: assess whether desired change is better off achieved by mul-tisectoral collaboration; drive forward collaboration by mobilising a critical mass of policy and public attention. • Define: frame the problem strategi-cally and holistically so that all sec-tors and stakeholders can see the benefits of collaboration and contri-bution to the public good• Design: create solutions relevant to context, building on existing mecha-nisms, and leverage the strengths of diverse sectors for collective impact. • Relate: ensure resources for multi-sectoral collaboration mechanisms, including for open communication and deliberation on evidence, norms, and innovation across all components of collaboration. • Realise: learn by doing, and adapt with regular feedback. Remain open to redefining and redesigning the collaboration to ensure relevance, effectiveness, and responsiveness to change. • Capture success: agree on success markers, using qualitative and quan-titative methods to monitor results regularly and comprehensively, and learn from both failures and successes to inform action and sustain gains

    Improving vasectomy services in Kenya : lessons from a mystery client study

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    Much has been done to improve quality of care for women seeking family planning services,1 but less is known about quality of care for men in those services. With this in mind, researchers in Kenya designed a 'mystery client' study, in which men posed as potential vasectomy clients at clinics in different parts of the country. There was wide variation in how men were treated. Positive experiences included a courteous reception, full information on vasectomy, and private, sympathetic counselling that included discussion of other contraceptive methods. Negative experiences included ridicule, inadequate information, discomfort in describing the male body and bias against vasectomy. Real-life stories by men were found to have a positive effect on service providers and male clients; many improvements in the quality of service delivery for men are recommended.7 page(s
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