Knowledge SectionsE-magazinesThe CI PartnersClassifiedsAbout UsUpcoming Events |
Average Rating: no ratings submitted
Social Marketing Zinc to Improve Diarrhea Treatment Practices - Findings and Lessons Learned from CambodiaPublication DateOctober 2007
SummaryThis 29-page report details the design and implementation of, as well as the results and lessons learned from, an ongoing pilot project to introduce zinc, co-packaged with oral rehydration salts (ORS), through the private sector in selected districts of two provinces of Cambodia. Led by the United States-based Abt Associates’ Point-of-Use Water Disinfection and Zinc Treatment (POUZN) Project and funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), this evaluation looked at a pilot private sector approach to addressing the health problem of diarrhoea, one of the main causes of childhood morbidity and mortality in low-income settings. This process evaluation was jointly conducted by the POUZN Project and the World Health Organization (WHO) from January 28 to February 9 2007. As detailed here, in early 2004, WHO and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) published a joint statement recommending the use of a new formulation of ORS, along with therapeutic doses of zinc, for the treatment of children under the age of 5 during diarrhoea episodes. The new ORS formulation has a lower level of salt and glucose than the standard ORS, resulting in a lower osmolarity of the solution and thereby reducing stool output and vomiting and thus decreasing the likelihood of hospital admission for intravenous therapy due to dehydration. Based on this recommendation, the Cambodian Ministry of Health (MOH) and Population Services International (PSI) decided to introduce the new low-osmolarity ORS and zinc through private sector channels. In March 2006, the MOH and PSI, in coordination with WHO and with financial support from USAID, launched a demonstration project to introduce a diarrhoea treatment kit (DTK) containing both products, branded as OraselKIT®. Specifically, PSI/Cambodia partnered with the Reproductive and Child Health Alliance (RACHA), a local non-governmental organisation (NGO), and CARE Cambodia in Pursat, and American Red Cross (ARC)/Cambodian Red Cross (CRC) and RACHA in Siem Reap, to distribute the Orasel KIT®. As of this writing, the kit is subsidised to ensure affordability to the vast majority of people, and includes a low-literacy insert designed to provide information to mothers whose children are suffering from dehydration and diarrhoea. To reach health providers, PSI/Cambodia developed a training curriculum in close collaboration with WHO and the Cambodian MOH. A training of trainers programme was launched with NGO partners (RACHA, Care Cambodia, ARC/CRC), who then trained health centre staff, village shop owners, and village health support groups. The programme also trained private healthcare providers, including members of PSI's Sun Quality Health Network clinics, pharmacists, and drug store owners on use of the Orasel KIT® and diarrhoea management. PSI also worked to expand its collaboration with the Cambodian Pediatrician Association to increase awareness of the new guidelines for treatment of diarrhoea among children under 5 years of age. Amongst the communication tools developed to raise this awareness were a television and radio commercial, mobile video shows, a karaoke song video compact disc (VCD), and point of sales materials to increase knowledge of the correct treatment of diarrhoea and to create demand for the Orasel KIT®. To assess progress of this pilot programme, evaluators used the following methodologies: document review; interviews conducted at the central, provincial, and district levels; field visits; and focus group discussions (FGDs) with female users and nonusers of the kit. They identified the following key lessons:
ContactMs. Susan Mitchell
Director, POUZN/Abt Associates
Abt Associates Inc.
Air Rights Center
Bethesda MD
20814
United States
Related SummariesSourceEmail from Angela Milton to The Communication Initiative on December 17 2007 and May 16 2008; and Private-Sector Partnerships (PSP) for Better Health-One [PSP-One] website. Placed on the Communication Initiative site April 23 2008 Last Updated July 16 2008 |
Register and ParticipateUser loginPollDevelopment News |