Self-care interventions for advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights – implementation considerations

Author:

Narasimhan Manjulaa1ORCID,Logie Carmen H.2ORCID,Hargreaves James3ORCID,Janssens Wendy4ORCID,Aujla Mandip1,Steyn Petrus1ORCID,van der Sijpt Erica5,Hardon Anita6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research, World Health Organization, includes the UNDP/UNFPA/UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP), Switzerland

2. Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Canada

3. Center for Evaluation, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom

4. Department of Economics, School of Business and Economics, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands

5. Anthropology Department, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands

6. Knowledge, Technology, Innovation, Wageningen University and Research, the Netherlands

Abstract

Self-care refers to the ability of people to promote their own health, prevent disease, maintain health, and cope with illness and disability, with or without the support of a health or care worker. Self-care interventions are tools that support self-care as additional options to facility-based care. Recognizing laypersons as active agents in their own health care, the World Health Organization (WHO)’s global normative guideline on self-care interventions recommends people-centred, holistic approaches to health and well-being for sexual and reproductive health and rights. Examples of such interventions include pregnancy self-testing, self-monitoring of blood glucose and/or blood pressure during pregnancy and self-administration of injectable contraception. Building on previous studies and aligning with the WHO classification for self-care, we discuss nine key implementation considerations: agency, information, availability, utilization, social support, accessibility, acceptability, affordability, and quality. The implementation considerations form the foundation of a model implementation framework that was developed using an ecological health systems approach to support sustainable changes in health care delivery.

Publisher

Inishmore Laser Scientific Publishing Ltd

Subject

General Medicine

Reference51 articles.

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4. Blockage and flow: Intimate experiences of condoms and microbicides in a South African clinical trial;J Stadler;Cult. Health Sex,2011

5. Women's views and experiences of hormonal contraceptives: What we know and what we need to find out;A. Hardon,1997

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