care groups roundtables tom davis, mph tops senior specialist for sbc
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Care Groups Roundtables Tom Davis, MPH TOPS Senior Specialist for SBC. What are Care Groups?. Developed by Dr. Pieter Ernst with World Relief/ Mozambique, and pioneered by FH and WR for the past decade. Now used by at least 22 organization in 20 countries. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Care Groups Roundtables
Tom Davis, MPH
TOPS Senior Specialist for SBC
What are Care Groups?
Developed by Dr. Pieter Ernst with World Relief/ Mozambique, and pioneered by FH and WR for the past decade. Now used by at least 22 organization in 20 countries.
Focuses on building teams of volunteer women who represent, serve, and do health promotion with blocks of <15 households each
A community-based strategy for improving coverage and behavior change
The Care Group Model
Promoter #6
Promoter #3
Promoter #7
12 Leader Mothers
14 families14 families
14 families14 families14 families14 families14 families14 families
Promoter #5
Promoter #4
Promoters (example, one district)
Each Promoter educates and motivates 5-9 Care Groups (9 in this example). Each Care Group has 6-16 CG Volunteers (12 in this example)
14 families14 families
Promoter #2
Promoter #114 families
14 families
12 Leader Mothers
12 Leader Mothers
12 Leader Mothers
12 Leader Mothers
12 Leader Mothers
12 Leader Mothers
Each Leader Mother educates and motivates pregnant women and mothers with children 0-23m of age in <15 households every two weeks. Children in households with children 24-59m are visited every six months.
Care Groups
With this model, one Health Promoter can cover up to 2,016 beneficiary households.
12 Leader Mothers
12 Leader Mothers
This example: “9x12x14 structure”
1Supervisor
CGV #10
CGV #1
CGV #7
CGV #11
CGV #12
CGV #4
CGV #2
CGV #3
CGV #9
CGV #8
CGV #6
CGV #5
Care Group
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#1
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group #12
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group #11
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group #10 Mum
#10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#9 Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#8
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#7
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#6
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#5
Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#4Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#3Mum #10
Mum #1
Mum #7
Mum #11
Mum #12
Mum #4
Mum #2
Mum #3
Mum #9
Mum #8
Mum #6
Mum #5
Small Group
#2CGV #1
CGV #2
CGV #3
CGV #4 CGV
#5
CGV #6
CGV #7
CGV #8
CGV #9
CGV #10CGV
#11
CGV #12
Prom
Care Groups Outperform in Behavior Change:Indicator Gap Closure: Care Group Projects
vs. CSHGP AverageIndicator Gap Closure on Rapid Catch Indicators:
Care Groups CSHGP Projects vs. All CSHGP Projects
32
4135
52
71
59
39
53 51
77
49
63
37
53
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
RapidCATCH Indicator
Per
cent
All CSHGPs, 2003-2009 (n=58)
CSHGP using CareGroups (2003-2010,n=9)
Gap closure range for Care Group projects: ~35 – 70%(Avg = 57%)
Gap closure range in non-CG projects ~25 – 45% (Avg. = 37%)
Care Group Performance: Perc. Reduction in Child Death Rate (0-59m)in Thirteen CSHGP Care Group Projects in Eight Countries
(Green line = average of USAID child survival programs)
23%
33%
48%41% 42%
32%28% 29%
14%
26%
12%
34%30%
14%
33%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
CSHGP Project
% R
ed. U
5MR
Series1
Care Groups and Estimated Reduction in Child Deaths
This presentation was made possible by the generous support of the American people through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The contents are the responsibility of Save the Children and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government.