Barriers and facilitators to growth monitoring and promotion in Nepal: Household, health worker and female community health volunteer perceptions
Volunteers
RC620-627
growth
Health Promotion
Pediatrics
RJ1-570
03 medical and health sciences
community health workers
0302 clinical medicine
health facilities
Nepal
Humans
Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases
Child
Community Health Workers
2. Zero hunger
growth monitoring
1. No poverty
child nutrition
Gynecology and obstetrics
Original Articles
3. Good health
RG1-991
Female
Perception
Public Health
DOI:
10.1111/mcn.12999
Publication Date:
2020-07-13T06:24:29Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
AbstractGrowth monitoring and promotion (GMP) is both a service for diagnosing inadequate child growth in its earliest stages and a delivery platform for nutrition counselling. The widespread use of GMP services in developing countries has the potential to substantially reduce persistent child undernutrition through early diagnosis and by linking caregivers and their children to key health and nutrition services. However, researchers have questioned the effectiveness of GMP services, which are frequently undermined by underdeveloped health systems and inconsistent implementation. This analysis examined both supply‐ and demand‐side factors for GMP utility in Nepal from the perspectives of beneficiaries and service providers, particularly focusing on three components of GMP: growth assessment, analysis of growth status and counselling. The most common factors influencing GMP uptake included beneficiaries' perceptions of the relative importance of GMP and the knowledge and skill of frontline workers. Both providers and beneficiaries viewed GMP as a secondary health and nutrition activity and therefore less important than curative services. We found deficits in GMP‐related knowledge and skills among providers (i.e. health workers and female community health volunteers), as well as indications of poor training quality and coverage. Furthermore, we found variation in GMP utilization by maternal age, education and residency (alone, nuclear or extended), as well as household socio‐economic well‐being and rurality. This study is the first to assess factors influencing both beneficiaries and service providers for GMP utilization. Further research is needed to explore the implementation of improved GMP protocols and to evaluate facility‐level implementation barriers.
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