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Two Examples of Program Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation. Laili Irani. Example 1: Evaluate a Family Planning Program. Objective: To evaluate the impact of a family planning program in a rural village in West Africa Main goal:
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Two Examples of Program Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation Laili Irani
Example 1: Evaluate a Family Planning Program • Objective: • To evaluate the impact of a family planning program in a rural village in West Africa • Main goal: • To increase contraceptive knowledge, fertility preferences and contraceptive use
Q.1) What is the problem and why does it exist? • Study recent DHS for evidence on rural area of interest • Results show: low contraceptive prevalence, knowledge and attitudes See Toolkit for examples of population based surveys • Review data from formative research • Results shows: low prevalence of contraceptive use
Q.1) What is the problem and why does it exist? (cont.) • Conduct a needs assessment • Survey village leaders and community members • In this example, results show: • Greater need for modern contraceptive methods • Easier access to wider range of methods See Toolkit on how to conduct a needs assessment
Q. 2) What interventions can work? • Design an intervention • A community outreach program in which health workers visit homes and address the contraceptive needs of families • Plan a pilot project • Carry out the project in one neighborhood of the village • Expand to the entire village
Q. 3) What are we doing? • Develop a logic model • Inputs outcomes See Toolkit for description and examples of logic models • Create an M&E plan • Include a timeline of program activities See Toolkit for sample outline & program examples • Produce a Performance Monitoring Plan (PMP) • Share proposed activities with stakeholders and donors • Identify indicators to be collected and analyzed See Toolkit for compendium of FP indictors • Engage stakeholders in every step of the program
Q. 3) What are we doing? (cont.) • Monitor the various components of the program • Inputs • Finances, staff, training materials, contraceptives and transportation • Processes • Health workers trained to work in the community • Health workers visit community periodically and distribute contraceptives • Program officers meet with village leaders often • Ensure quality of program is maintained
Q. 4) Are we implementing the program as planned? • Output monitoring • Number of first visits made • Number of follow-up visits • Types and numbers of contraceptives distributed • Outcome monitoring • Change in percentage of contraceptive users over time See Toolkit for indicator guides for FP programs
Q. 5) Are the interventions working / making a difference? • Outcome evaluation See Toolkit for examples of evaluation designs and resources
Q. 6) Is the program sustainable and scalable? • Sustainability • Ensure local government continues the community outreach program with the aid of health workers • Build the community’s capacity to encourage voluntary contraceptive use among families • Scalability • Expand the program to other villages and regions within the country See Toolkit for means to measure sustainability and scalability
Next Steps • Share findings with all the stakeholders, including • Village leaders and community members • Local government and health department • Funding agency • Higher levels of government and health leadership • Disseminate findings widely including through mass media, research literature and the internet
Example 2: Evaluate a Malaria Prevention Program • Objective: • To evaluate the impact of a malaria prevention program in a district in East Africa • Main goal: • To ensure all pregnant women and children <14 years are sleeping under insecticide treated nets (ITNs) in all the villages of a district in East Africa
Q.1) What is the problem & why does it exist? • Study recent population based surveys • DHS, Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey • Results show: High malaria prevalence and low ITNs use • Conduct a needs assessment • Visit selected homes; interview selected community members • In this example, results show: Use of ITNs is low due to lack of knowledge and cost See Toolkit for various data sources and assessment designs
Q. 2) What interventions can work? • Review other programs • Collaborate with more experienced programs • Plan a pilot project • Design an intervention • Use handheld GPS devices to create clusters • Visit all homes, identify pregnant women and children <14 years and provide them with vouchers for ITN • Program staff visit to ensure ITN installed correctly and teach villagers how to reapply insecticide See Toolkit for resources, i.e., Roll Back Malaria website
Q. 3) What are we doing? • Develop a logic model • Inputs outcomes • Develop a PMP • Engage stakeholders in every step of the program • Community members and village leaders • Local government and district officials • Experts in the field • Donors and policy makers See Toolkit for a logic model and draft checklist for developing PMP plan for malaria program
Q. 4) Are we implementing the program as planned? • Monitor the various components of the program • Ensure quality of program is maintained See Toolkit for: • Indicator guides for malaria programs • References on how to conduct routine monitoring • Impact evaluation references
Q. 5) Are the interventions working / making a difference? • Outcome evaluation See Toolkit for alternative study designs
Q. 6) Is the program sustainable and scalable? • Sustainability • Ensure local government continues the voucher program • Empower community leaders to encourage community to access ITNs and to use them effectively • Scalability • Expand the program to other districts and regions within the country See Toolkit for descriptions and examples of how programs can be sustainable and scalable