Adapting Reach Up and Learn in Crisis and Conflict Settings: An Exploratory Multiple Case Study

Author:

Wilton Katelin Swing1,Murphy Katie Maeve1,Mahmud Ahsan1,Azam Syful1,Habib Anika1,Ibrahim Iman1,Della Neve Eloisa1,Pena Gabriela1,Mehrin Syeda Fardina2,Shiraji Shamima2,Hamadani Jena Derakhshani2

Affiliation:

1. aInternational Rescue Committee, New York, New York

2. bMaternal and Child Health Division, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh Dhaka, Bangladesh

Abstract

OBJECTIVES In 2019, >71 million children aged <5 had spent their entire lives in conflict-affected settings. Compounding adversities including violence, poverty, and displacement have immediate and long-term effects on early childhood development, health, behavior, and well-being. In response, adaptations of Reach Up have been implemented in conflict and crisis settings. METHODS This article uses exploratory multiple case study methodology, drawing from implementation and qualitative data from 3 interventions: a mobile phone-based intervention promoting nurturing care among Rohingya and crisis-affected host communities in Bangladesh; Reach Up amid acute violence and displacement in Northeast Syria; and Reach Up group sessions and home visits integrated with health services for an indigenous population in Venezuela. RESULTS In Bangladesh, tailoring interactive voice response messages improved responsiveness to the developmental needs of young children, yet complementary in-person services were identified as a key program enhancement. In Syria, rapid adaptations of Reach Up addressed the needs of families in acute crisis, including social–emotional learning games for school-aged children. In Venezuela, Reach Up, coupled with complementary lactation counseling, yielded high rates of uptake and satisfaction, and children’s language development was highlighted as a key area of growth. CONCLUSIONS Recommendations to promote early childhood development in crisis and conflict settings include: (1) cultural adaptation based on a holistic understanding of children and caregivers’ needs; (2) the integration of child and family safety and linkages with complementary services on the basis of community needs and priorities, and (3) the importance of designing for scale through blended models and costing analyses.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference14 articles.

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2. Effects of armed conflict on child health and development: a systematic review;Kadir;PLoS One,2019

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4. Risk and resilience trajectories in war-exposed children across the first decade of life;Halevi;J Child Psychol Psychiatry,2016

5. Implementation research for early childhood development programming in humanitarian contexts;Murphy;Ann N Y Acad Sci,2018

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