Soul Beat Africa is co-sponsored by Soul City Institute and the Communication Initiative

SOUL BEAT AFRICA

Where communication and media are central to Africa's social and economic development

E-magazines


Average Rating: no ratings submitted

Maternal Survival Toolkit


Publication Date

January 1, 2005

Summary

This web-based toolkit from the Change Project contains approaches and tools for behaviour change interventions for maternal survival. According to the Change project, the set of tools in this kit have been designed for effective and locally appropriate behaviour change and have been field tested in Kenya, Guinea, and Bangladesh.

The Maternal Survival framework in this kit organises behaviour change interventions into three areas: seeking skilled care, birth preparedness, and providing skilled care. These are interventions at the household, community, and health facility levels that begin with information gathering on attitudes and beliefs about skilled care and include lessons learned and global programme experience from a project called the Safe Motherhood Initiative.

There is a set of tools adaptable to existing programmes that corresponds to each area of the Maternal Survival framework. These tools provide formative research instruments and progress to tools for the design and implementation of effective interventions to facilitate increased effectiveness of maternal survival programmes.

Publisher

Contact

Academy for Educational Development - The Change Project

1875 Connecticut Ave., NW

Washington
D.C. 20009-5721
United States
Tel: + 1 202 884 8000
Fax: + 1 202 884 8454

Source

Source January-February 2007 on January 30 2007 and the
Source website.


Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site March 09 2007
Last Updated September 02 2008



How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work?


0
No votes yet
Your rating: None

Help Seed The CI Network

Jobs and more...

Child Participation in Radio

How do you rate the success of current efforts to give children access to the radio airwaves in Africa?