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Gender Dynamics Underlying Voucher Schemes: Experience From Broadening Access to Maternal Health Care in Uganda Elizabeth Ekirapa-Kiracho, Principal Investigator Co-Investigators- Moses Tetui, Asha George etc ,
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Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Aug 02, 2015

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Page 1: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Gender Dynamics Underlying Voucher Schemes:

Experience From Broadening Access to Maternal Health Care in Uganda

Elizabeth Ekirapa-Kiracho, Principal InvestigatorCo-Investigators- Moses Tetui, Asha George

etc ,

Page 2: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

MANIFEST study• Action research to move beyond proof of concept

to support local ownership and promote sustainability of intervention strategies

Page 3: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Context: 3 districts in Eastern UgandaE.g. Kamuli district

•600,000 population•56 Health facilities

– 2 private hospitals, 2 HC IV (EmOC), 13HC III (with labs) 39 HC II (outpatient)

•50 % of health worker vacancies

Page 4: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda
Page 5: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

30 Community level dialogues: women, men, transporters, adolescent mothers

Page 6: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

6 District consultations

Page 7: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Makerere & DHMT

Page 8: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Who has what?• Affects Women’s access to services

o FP, delivery, ANC, PNC etc

• Women still depend on men for savingsomen have money, but spend it on

drinking• Men slow at joining savings groups for

MNHoLeaders of savings groups -Men

Page 9: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Who does what?

• Incentives for boda boda drivers (male)oFollowing up women to ensure they

return for follow-up facility careoJumping the queue at health centers

and ensuring that the women they brought get attention

• Unintended consequences

Page 10: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Who decides?

• Still mostly men & mother-in-lawso Place of delivery, number of children, spacing etc.

• Increasing role of boda boda riderso Easier to create a linkage with transporters when

they are part of a savings group

Page 11: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Who is valued for what?

• Women valued for having children, but not while pregnanto Husbands slow at accepting the use of contraception

o While some do not want to identify with pregnant women or be seen with them

• Women always pressured to prove fertility.o Men can get away with being infertile.

Page 12: Moses Tetui on maternal health in Uganda

Acknowledgements

• Makerere University School of Public Health• DFID• Comic Relief • The conference organizers • SHAPES thematic group leadership