Working Worldwide
C-Change works worldwide and is
implementing programs and research in Africa, Eastern Europe,
and Central and South Asia.
NAMIBIA. In many PEPFAR programs,
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) rely on community
organizations and volunteers to reach communities with
critical HIV and AIDS messages and interventions. In many
cases, staff and volunteers have minimal training and access
to tools for reaching communities, families, and individuals
to achieve positive behavior change. C-Change is working with
PEPFAR partners to build the capacity of NGOs to design and
implement behavior change communication interventions that
address prevention, testing, and care and support practices.
C-Change will build a sustainable network of skilled people
and organizations to develop and support quality
communication interventions. Capacity-building strategies
include formal and informal training, mentoring, and direct
technical assistance to improve the effectiveness of their
interventions.
MADAGASCAR. Madagascar has
rich bio-diversity. However, local and national organizations
have concluded that conservations efforts to sustain and
maintain this bio-diversity will be offset by population
growth unless the birth rate (as high as 6.9 in some areas)
declines. Integration of reproductive health information into
environmental activities has become a national priority.
C-Change is assisting in this effort and drawing on its
previous success among youth with an HIV/AIDS prevention
program -- the Ankoay (eagle) program. To be certified as
Ankoay status, youth groups carry out HIV/AIDS, hygiene,
adolescent reproductive health and environmental activities,
which they select from "best practices" activity menus.
C-Change will dramatically scale up the Ankoay model with
scout troops, schools, and sports team.
LESOTHO. UNAIDS predicts that
seven out of every eight HIV infections in the coming year
will be directly or indirectly related to multiple concurrent
partnerships (MCP). C-Change is implementing research and
developing activities that address the complex behavior
patterns of MCP. At the request of Lesotho’s National
AIDS Commission (NAC) and Ministry of Health (MOH), C-Change
is assisting with the implementation and dissemination of the
National HIV/AIDS Communication Strategy. C-Change is also
working to identify ways to prompt community dialogues around
the issue of MCP and to address the social norms that support
the related behaviors. Social Surveys, a regional partner in
South Africa, has completed the field work for the formative
research on kinship networks and the barriers to discussing
MCP that exist within communities. This research will inform
messages and intervention strategies for a national BCC
campaign.
ALBANIA.
Albanian couples’ use of modern contraceptives is among
the lowest in the European region. There is high reliance on
traditional contraceptive methods and emergency contraception
for family planning purposes. Abortion is also common.
C-Change is using behavior change communication (BCC) to
increase the use of family planning services available in the
private and public sectors, to counter misconceptions about
family planning interventions and methods, and to improve
informed choice for contraceptives. An integrated
communication program is focused on changing social norms
among young men and women in Albania. It includes a media
campaign to develop cutting-edge, dynamic messages for
broadcast and print media and community-based interventions.
The program is also working with the Albanian Institute of
Media to train journalists as family planning
‘champions’ by providing information on promoting
healthy reproductive behaviors and lifestyle.
EUROPE AND EURASIA. Health care consumers exercised few
health care rights, responsibilities, and protections in the
former Soviet Union. Since its downfall, unfortunately, few
investments have been made to change the behavior of
individuals and families to assume greater responsibility for
their health. Additionally, since the 1990s, the profile of
illnesses has changed from those related to infectious
diseases to chronic (non-communicable) illnesses, e.g.
diabetes, cancer, and heart disease, that are related to
lifestyle choices such as alcohol, smoking, physical
activity, diet, and environment. USAID charged the C-Change
program to examine the region's experience in motivating
health care consumers to take more responsibility for their
health and determine how USAID and other donors can make
their assistance more effective in this area. To this end,
C-Change made field visits to three distinct geographical
regions within Europe and Eurasia--Kyrgyzstan, Albania, and
Armenia--and examined health consumers' perceptions and
practices regarding their health care and health care
services in order to provide recommendations for
strengthening the effectiveness of interventions to empower
health care consumers.
C-Change produced an assessment report and made a presentation on the results of the assessment at
the "WHO International Conference 30th Anniversary of the
Alma-Ata Declaration on Primary Health Care," in Almaty,
Kazakhstan on October 15-16, 2008. This conference reaffirmed
that health is a fundamental human right and that its
attainment requires the action of many social and economic
sectors in addition to the health sector. A key point made in
the C-Change assessment was emphasized in the conference's
closing statements: "Without empowerment, progress in primary
health care (PHC) is not possible."
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