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An Evaluation of Where Women Have No Doctor and A Book for Midwives

An Evaluation of Where Women Have No Doctor and A Book for Midwives. Presented to the Hesperian Foundation By: Eleanor Hartzell, Joanna Hoffman, Dina Mikdadi, and Carrie Wood NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service April 23, 2009. Research Questions.

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An Evaluation of Where Women Have No Doctor and A Book for Midwives

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  1. An Evaluation of Where Women Have No Doctor andA Book for Midwives Presented to the Hesperian Foundation By: Eleanor Hartzell, Joanna Hoffman, Dina Mikdadi, and Carrie Wood NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service April 23, 2009

  2. Research Questions • Do end users believe the books provide life-saving, practical information? • Do the books result in health information sharing? • Are the books useful in different contexts?

  3. Survey Background • Based on last year’s Capstone project • Added new variables • Covered two publications

  4. Limitations to the Survey • Convenience sampling • Access issues (computer & language) • Missing answers • Two versions of ABFM

  5. Sampling • Distributed to 823 users. • 246 responded- 30% of sampling frame.

  6. Demographic Information 04/18/09

  7. Who Uses the Books? • Health trainers/researchers (32.5%) • Volunteers (32.5%) • Non-profit workers (26.7%) • Midwives (27.5%), Nurses (23.3%), Community Health Workers (22.9%), Doctors (11.7%), 04/18/09

  8. Case Study

  9. Sites • ATOCHI- Comalapa • Observed workshop • Interviewed Executive Council and workshop participants • CODECOT-Xela • Interviewed midwives

  10. Limitations to the Case Study • Convenience sampling • Focused on only one country

  11. Reactions to the Books

  12. Positive Findings • Both books considered effective resources • Lead to information-sharing in group settings • Used as teaching and training materials • Generally relevant in varied cultural settings

  13. Areas for Improvement • Greater incorporation of traditional medicines • Decrease reliance on prescription drugs • Focus on planning for emergency care • More information on social factors related to teen mothers and pregnancy out of wedlock • Improving accessibility of content • Audiovisual resources for illiterate users • Translations

  14. Thank You!

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