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National Plan for Infant Survival and Development - SUPERVIVIRCountryColombia RegionGlobal, Africa, Latin America Programme SummaryThe National Plan for Infant Survival and Development (Plan Nacional para la Supervivencia y el Desarrollo) was developed between 1984 and 1992 as an expression of the commitment of the Colombian government to guarantee the rights of children to the protection of their health. It was to be carried out by means of direct actions to reduce child mortality from causes that could be controlled, like complications during pregnancy, childbirth and post-childbirth, acute respiratory infections, diarrhoea, under-nourishment and communicable diseases preventable through vaccination.
Since the adoption of the Plan to Eradicate Absolute Poverty, the National Plan for the Infant Survival and Development received the name SUPERVIVIR. Communication StrategiesSUPERVIVIR emphasises the influence of people's behaviour in health, and the necessity of action that promotes and improves health, taking into consideration that changes in behaviour are obtained through education and the consequent modification of knowledge, attitudes, and practices. Of equal importance was the development of basic health services. The work of the Health Watchers (Vigias de la Salud) consisted of visiting families with children below five years of age or pregnant to help them identify illness or death risks, to provide them with information to prevent or to deal with health problems once they appear. For example: they received information about how to prepare oral serum to avoid dehydration by diarrhoea, how to prevent accidents, when to vaccinate their children, the care that should be taken with influenza, the need to play and to offer affection to the children, and finally, the importance of the attending prenatal clinics for pregnant women. It was also the function of the Health Watchers to give direction on the health services offered by the state - among them vaccination - and to channel to these centres the children and the women who required services. Training: This education was carried out through multiple training courses and was supported by educational printed materials, games, and supervision and service manuals. The students of all the secondary education establishments in the country were trained through “Behaviour and Health” classes over the course of 2 years - in the eighth and ninth grades. Social mobilisation: Social Marketing: The promotion of SUPERVIVIR in television and radio included three phases: presentation of the national plan to the population; presentation of the Watchers informing who they were and their technical endorsement by the health sector; and support to the components of the plan through simple, short, precise and direct messages. The vaccination component was promoted with the message "All children must receive all vaccines before the date of their first birthday". National Vaccination Crusades: Fortification of the Expanded Programme on Immunisation: Strategies used by SUPERVIVIR to support the EPI were: Development IssuesImmunisation and Vaccines, Children, Health. Key PointsAmong the biggest achievements of SUPERVIVIR was community mobilisation in favour of children's health, the coordination between programmes, and the diffusion of simple but vital messages for child survival In the 1984-1990 period the rate of infantile and maternal mortality, neonatal mortality, and the deaths of minors of 5 years of age caused by diarrhoea and acute respiratory infection decreased remarkably. In addition, the vaccination coverage in children below one year pf age increased in significant percentages: Polio 92%, DPT (Diphtheria, Tetanus and Pertussis) 78%, Measles 73%, Tuberculosis 98%. PartnersMinistry of Health, Ministry of National Education, Colombian Institute of Family Welfare, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO)/World Health Organisation (WHO). ContactMinistry of Social Protection
Cra. 13 #32-76 Bogota, Colombia Tel: 3365066 atencionalciudadano@minproteccionsocial.gov.co SourceVaccination in Colombia 80-90. One decade of achievements. United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean. Consultant: Maria In Placed on the Communication Initiative site June 02 2005 Last Updated June 02 2005 |
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