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Final impact evaluation of the transform program

2022EnglishTransform : monitoring, evaluation, learning, and adapting (TRANSFORM : MELA) activity | COR: Gebeyehu Abelti Maternal child health careEthiopia Horn Of Africa

Metadata

Authors
Michael Midling, PhD, Chief of Party/Principal Investigator
Contract/Code
OAA-I-15-00028 | AID-663-TO-17-00001
Institution
8360 - The Mitchell Group, Inc. (TMG) 8543 USAID. Mission to Ethiopia
Keywords
Access to services | Aged | Birth | Family health care | Health care | Health facilities | Immunizations | Postnatal nutrition | Maternal mortality | Child mortality | Infant mortality | Maternal health care | Child health care | Infant health care | Family planning KD90 Agricultural markets (5.25)
ID
PA00ZR96
File size
1013 KB
Source
Open PDF

Abstract

This report outlines the findings from the impact evaluation of the five-year Transform Program supported by USAID/Ethiopia. Transform?s objective was to address maternal and child morbidity and mortality in Ethiopia, focusing on maternal, newborn, and child health, and family planning (MNCH/FP). To determine program impact, the evaluation collected baseline and endline data from Transform intervention areas and from non-Transform intervention areas. The net relative difference over time in Transform intervention areas revealed the contribution of the Transform program activities, via Difference-in-Differences (DID) analysis. The surveys included over 6,500 respondents, all women aged 15-49. The impact evaluation focused on indicators in four different categories: family planning, maternal health, child health and immunizations, and cross-cutting issues. In the area of family planning, all three indicators (modern contraceptive use, long-acting contraception use, and postpartum family planning use) showed significant positive differences in Transform intervention areas compared to the non-Transform intervention areas. In the area of maternal health, five of the seven indicators ? including metrics such as early antenatal care visits and skilled birth attendance ? showed significant positive differences. The results were mixed for child health and immunizations and the cross-cutting themes. In separate multivariate analyses, higher education levels, fewer births per woman, and having received MNCH/FP messages were consistently relevant predictors of desired outcomes. The report concludes with recommendations for the Ministry of Health and USAID.