1. The Maternal and Child Survival Program
Acting to End Preventable Child and Maternal Deaths
www.mcsprogram.org
2. Vision Statement
Self-reliant countries equipped with the analytical tools and effective systems enabling them to be on track to end preventable child and maternal deaths
USAID’s flagship
Maternal and Child Survival Program
3. Awarded: Launched June 2014 Length: 5 Years Funding Ceiling: 500 Million AOR: Nahed Matta Alternates: Malia Boggs; Megan Rhodes Technical Advisors: Karen Fogg; Kerry Ross
Program Basics
4. HSS
eHEALTH/mHEALTH
QUALITY
GENDER
BCC
INNOVATION
EQUITY
FAMILY PLANNING
MATERNAL HEALTH
NEWBORN HEALTH
CHILD HEALTH
IMMUNIZATION
NUTRITION
HIV/TB
MALARIA
WASH
PARTNERSHIPS
MEASUREMENT & ANALYTICS
COMMUNITY APPROACHES
WASH
MCSP
6. Not Your Mother’s MCHIP
Reflects changing global RMNCH landscape and shifts in USAID priorities
Greater emphasis on cross-cutting issues such as quality, equity, and gender
Focuses on sustainable scale up, such as strengthening health systems, that will deliver high impact technical interventions
20% of MCSP funds are required to be spent “through local institutions”
7. Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
Household
Clinics/Hospitals
Community
Referral
9. Strategic Objectives
Support countries to increase coverage and utilization of evidence-based, high-quality reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) interventions at the household, community and health facility levels;
Close innovation gaps to improve health outcomes among high-burden and vulnerable populations through engagement with a broad range of partners; and
Foster effective policy, program learning and accountability for improved RMNCH outcomes across the continuum of care
10. Household—Community—Facility—Subnational—National—Regional—Global
Impact at Scale
Outcomes
Outputs
RESULT 1: Sustainable and Equitable High Effective Coverage
Coverage and utilization of evidence-based, high-quality RMNCH interventions sustainably and equitably increased
RESULT 2: Innovation gaps closed
HIIs delivered through most effective delivery mechanism
RESULT 3: Health system strengthened
Effective policies, program learning and accountability
GOAL:
Reductions in maternal, newborn and child mortality accelerated with increased equity to end preventable maternal and child death
Guided by Strategic Priorities
High Impact Interventions
Country-led Analyses
Processes
Mainstream
Cross-Cutting
Approaches
and Innovations
Consistent with Project Vision
Project Conceptual Framework
Inputs
11. Integrated Themes
Scaling up RMNCH coverage in 24 priority countries
Maximize potential for public and private sector—including civil society
Addressing equity through a community health strengthening approach
Strengthening integrated community health platforms Integrating services across the continuum of care
Better care on the Day of Birth
Maternal newborn health and infectious disease Rigorous focus on monitoring, evaluation, and learning
12. Pregnancy
Labor & Delivery
Newborn
Child
TECHNICAL APPROACHES ACROSS LIFE CYCLE
HEALTH SYSTEM LEVELS
Community
District
Facility
ACTION-ORIENTED LEARNING CENTERED ON SYSTEMATIC SUPPORT & STUDY OF SCALE UP
Integrated Community Platforms
Whole Market District Approach
ANC/PNC and Day of Birth Integrated Interventions
Integrated Child Health Interventions (incl. prevention, immun., nutri.)
“PRACTICE – LEARNING FEEDBACK LOOP”
Helping Countries Eliminate Preventable Child & Maternal Death, by Achieving Impact at Scale for Women and Children
14. 24 Priority USAID Countries
Other countries where MCSP works:
Burma, Guinea, Namibia, South Africa
Countries where MCSP works
Afghanistan
Bangladesh
Democratic Republic of Congo
Ethiopia
Ghana
Haiti
India
Indonesia
Kenya
Liberia
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mozambique
Nepal
Nigeria
Pakistan
Rwanda
Senegal
South Sudan
Tanzania
Uganda
Yemen
Zambia
15. Thank You
Learn more at: www.mcsprogram.org
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Facebook.com/MCSPglobal
16. For more information, please visit
www.mcsprogram.org
This presentation was made possible by the generous support of the American people through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), under the terms of the Cooperative Agreement AID-OAA-A-14-00028. The contents are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government.
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