Evaluation of PAC Kenya Project
This report summarizes the key results emerging from an evaluation exercise carried out in Naivasha District to assess the effects of the COMMPAC intervention. The evaluation used a quasi-experimental design, with intervention and comparison groups covering six study sites within Naivasha District. Measurements were taken at baseline (from May to June 2010) and at endline (from January to February 2012). The data collected as part of this evaluation included
community-based surveys of women between the ages of 18 and 49; an inventory of all public and private health care facilities in the study area; interviews with providers working at the identified facilities; service statistics; and focus group discussions and in-depth interviews conducted with a range of community actors and key informants.
Source: EngenderHealth
Date of Publication: March 25, 2019
SIMILIAR RESOURCES
Tools
Examples
- Reaching First-Time Parents and Young Married Women for Healthy Timing and Spacing of Pregnancies in Burkina Faso
- The ECHO Study Report
- Creating Mobile Health Solutions for Behaviour Change: A Study of Eight Services in the mNutrition Initiative Portfolio
- Community Communication MNCH e-Manual: Participatory Health Promotion Sessions
- Lever les Tabous: La sexualité et les approches promouvant l’égalité des genres pour mettre fin aux unions et aux mariages d’enfants, précoces et forcés
- Transforming the Private Sector to Support Universal Malaria Diagnostic Coverage
- Advocating for Change for Adolescents’ Toolkit
- “Because my Husband and I Have Never Had a Baby Before…” Results and Lessons from Interventions with First-Time Parents in Madagascar, Mozambique, and Nigeria
- HTSP Project Briefs: Niger, Togo
- Making Content Meaningful: A Guide to Adapting Existing Global Health Content for Different Audiences
- Baseline Survey for PAC Project, Kenya
- Community Mobilization for PAC in Kenya: Evaluation Findings
- Community Health Information Cards
- How the Echo Platform Helped Drive and Monitor Behavior Change amongst Low-income Teenage Girls
- In-clinic Demand Generation for Post Pregnancy Family Planning Services In The Private Sector: A Promising Strategy