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USAID/Nicaragua health program performance : contributing to improved maternal, reproductive and child health in Nicaragua

2014English"Period December 2008-January 2013" | Footer title: USAID/Nicaragua: health program performance for the 2008-2013 period | Also known as: USAID/Nicaragua health program performance evaluation | Project title: Global health tech bridge III (GH tech bridge 3) | Mid-term evaluation: PB-AAB-115 Maternal child health careCODE: 524; Nicaragua Central America Latin

Metadata

Contract/Code
AID-OAA-C-13-00032 | AID-524-A-10-00003
Institution
11492 - Development & Training Services, Inc. (dTS) 10822 USAID. Bur. for Global Health
Keywords
HIV/AIDS | Child malnutrition | Communities | Cooperation | Disease prevention and control | Family health care | Gender equality | USAID KD90 Maternal child health care (3313.2) | Development program planning and management (2150.0) | Development program and activity evaluation (1684.0)
ID
PA00JXGB
File size
10155 KB
Source
Open PDF

Abstract

The USAID/Nicaragua Health Program (2008-2013) worked to achieve a more educated and healthy population with a greater ability to contribute to and share the benefits of a growing economy and strengthen the health sector of Nicaragua (e.g. public and private sectors, NGOs, universities and communities) by providing technical and financial assistance.  The purpose of this evaluation was to: (1) determine the extent to which the objectives of the program were met and their contribution to the gender approach; (2) to evaluate the implementation of the mid-term (2007) evaluation recommendations; and (3) to identify the key factors that contributed to or prevented achieving the proposed results.  In general, during the period studied, Nicaragua has made significant progress in family planning and maternal and child health.  The Government of Nicaragua-led implementation of health policies, plans and strategies, coupled with the harmonization and coordination of international health cooperation (including USAID cooperation), has contributed to progress in the main demographic and maternal and child health indicators: (1) total fertility rate (TFR); (2) maternal mortality rate (MMR); (3) mortality rate (MR) in children under 5 years of age; (4) infant mortality rate (IMR); (5) neonatal mortality rate (NMR); and (6) chronic malnutrition (CM) in children under 5 years of age.  In the case of HIV/AIDS, as expected, increasing the coverage of counseling and voluntary testing in key populations has increased the disease's prevalence and incidence, but has reduced its lethality and mortality.  As this report shows, implementing the Family and Community Health Model (MOSAFC) has been fundamental to the country's health achievements, especially the role of the Family, Community and Life Committee (GFCV), which is the cornerstone of Ministry of Heath (MINSA) health promotion and prevention work.  (Excerpt, modified)