This document discusses assigning responsibility and managing communication for behavior change programs. It addresses who should manage different aspects of communication planning like research, message development, and implementation. While technical programs or health education units could manage communication, having a separate focal point can better coordinate activities. The skills required include advocacy, resource mobilization, and monitoring and evaluation. Contracting expertise from the private sector is common for activities like research and materials development, but the ministry must oversee contractors. Overall management requires planning resources, developing budgets and work plans, and considering costs of staffing, training, materials, and technical assistance.
CORE Group Fall Meeting 2010. Family Planning Integration: Overcoming Barriers to NGO Programming. A Presentation of Preliminary Results from the CORE Group CBFP/MCH Integration Survey. - Paige Anderson Bowen, CORE Group Consultant
Myanmar Strategic Purchasing 5: Continuous Learning and Problem SolvingHFG Project
This is the fifth in a series of briefs examining practical considerations in the design and implementation of a strategic purchasing pilot project among private general practitioners (GPs) in Myanmar. This pilot aims to start developing the important functions of, and provide valuable lessons around, contracting of health providers and purchasing that will contribute to the broader health financing agenda. More specifically, it is introducing a blended payment system that mixes capitation payments and performance-based incentives to reduce households’ out-of-pocket spending and incentivize providers to deliver an essential package of primary care services.
This document summarizes a presentation about building sustainable accountability into strategic routine immunization (RI) planning in Nigeria. It discusses the development of an Accountability Framework for Routine Immunization in Nigeria (AFRIN) to improve goal-directed spending, performance monitoring, and consequences for missed targets. The framework maps the immunization system process and defines roles and responsibilities. It also discusses developing appropriate performance and output indicators, potential incentives and sanctions, the importance of monitoring, and new roles for communities and donors in accountability.
The document provides an analysis and synthesis report on primary health care changes across Canadian jurisdictions, with a focus on inter-professional collaboration, chronic disease management, and health promotion/disease prevention. It summarizes initiatives and lessons learned across regions. Key findings include that jurisdictions utilized inter-professional teams to provide services, developed partnerships, and had some form of leadership and planning structures in place. A variety of processes and tools were used to support changes, including formal team development, chronic disease models like the Wagner model, and train-the-trainer approaches. Both facilitators like electronic health records and barriers like lack of integration faced changes. Recommendations focus on developing Ontario's provincial plan and supporting Family Health Teams based on experiences elsewhere.
This document discusses the importance of project management knowledge and education, especially when implementing development projects created by the government. It notes that while India has seen significant growth in infrastructure projects in recent decades, many projects still face delays and cost overruns due to a lack of proper project management practices. The study aims to understand how project management education can help improve implementation of government development projects in terms of communication, execution, and completing projects on time and on budget. It discusses the benefits of project management training, facilitation, and mentoring for government employees working on projects. While some project management topics are taught in Indian universities, the curriculum does not provide comprehensive coverage of modern project management frameworks. This could hinder collaboration with international organizations that use
This document discusses integrating information and communication strategies into programme-based approaches (PBAs), the main method donors use to provide funding to developing countries. It argues that communication is important for three reasons: 1) To realize the principles of ownership and accountability in the Accra Agenda for Action, communication between governments and citizens is needed. 2) Better information and communication can improve PBA performance and service delivery. 3) Existing PBA efforts involve communication processes that lack coordination and integration across sectors. The document contends strategic communication can increase government legitimacy and accountability, public engagement, and support for development strategies, but challenges remain in balancing additional burdens on partners.
Unicef guideline for monitoring and evaluationSM Lalon
This document provides an overview of UNICEF's guide for monitoring and evaluation. It discusses the importance of monitoring and evaluation for improving programs, demonstrating accountability, and strengthening national capacity. The introduction defines monitoring as the periodic oversight of implementation to track progress and ensure corrective actions, while evaluation attempts to determine the relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, and impact of activities in light of objectives. It emphasizes that both tools are for management and learning. The guide covers organizing monitoring and evaluation within UNICEF and at the country level, with the goals of improving management, learning from experience, strengthening national capacity, and meeting donor requirements.
This document provides 10 helpful hints for planning and executing a successful training program for an ERP implementation project. The hints include: kicking off training at project launch; coordinating efforts between change management, training, and communications teams; basing the training team on client SMEs; hiring experienced training leads and augmenting with motivation; maximizing use of accelerated documentation tools; reducing review cycle times; understanding full lifecycle training needs and costs; investing in customized content; gaining midlevel management buy-in; and preparing end users for training delivery. Following these hints can help avoid common pitfalls and ensure the training program is effective in readying the organization for the ERP transition.
CORE Group Fall Meeting 2010. Family Planning Integration: Overcoming Barriers to NGO Programming. A Presentation of Preliminary Results from the CORE Group CBFP/MCH Integration Survey. - Paige Anderson Bowen, CORE Group Consultant
Myanmar Strategic Purchasing 5: Continuous Learning and Problem SolvingHFG Project
This is the fifth in a series of briefs examining practical considerations in the design and implementation of a strategic purchasing pilot project among private general practitioners (GPs) in Myanmar. This pilot aims to start developing the important functions of, and provide valuable lessons around, contracting of health providers and purchasing that will contribute to the broader health financing agenda. More specifically, it is introducing a blended payment system that mixes capitation payments and performance-based incentives to reduce households’ out-of-pocket spending and incentivize providers to deliver an essential package of primary care services.
This document summarizes a presentation about building sustainable accountability into strategic routine immunization (RI) planning in Nigeria. It discusses the development of an Accountability Framework for Routine Immunization in Nigeria (AFRIN) to improve goal-directed spending, performance monitoring, and consequences for missed targets. The framework maps the immunization system process and defines roles and responsibilities. It also discusses developing appropriate performance and output indicators, potential incentives and sanctions, the importance of monitoring, and new roles for communities and donors in accountability.
The document provides an analysis and synthesis report on primary health care changes across Canadian jurisdictions, with a focus on inter-professional collaboration, chronic disease management, and health promotion/disease prevention. It summarizes initiatives and lessons learned across regions. Key findings include that jurisdictions utilized inter-professional teams to provide services, developed partnerships, and had some form of leadership and planning structures in place. A variety of processes and tools were used to support changes, including formal team development, chronic disease models like the Wagner model, and train-the-trainer approaches. Both facilitators like electronic health records and barriers like lack of integration faced changes. Recommendations focus on developing Ontario's provincial plan and supporting Family Health Teams based on experiences elsewhere.
This document discusses the importance of project management knowledge and education, especially when implementing development projects created by the government. It notes that while India has seen significant growth in infrastructure projects in recent decades, many projects still face delays and cost overruns due to a lack of proper project management practices. The study aims to understand how project management education can help improve implementation of government development projects in terms of communication, execution, and completing projects on time and on budget. It discusses the benefits of project management training, facilitation, and mentoring for government employees working on projects. While some project management topics are taught in Indian universities, the curriculum does not provide comprehensive coverage of modern project management frameworks. This could hinder collaboration with international organizations that use
This document discusses integrating information and communication strategies into programme-based approaches (PBAs), the main method donors use to provide funding to developing countries. It argues that communication is important for three reasons: 1) To realize the principles of ownership and accountability in the Accra Agenda for Action, communication between governments and citizens is needed. 2) Better information and communication can improve PBA performance and service delivery. 3) Existing PBA efforts involve communication processes that lack coordination and integration across sectors. The document contends strategic communication can increase government legitimacy and accountability, public engagement, and support for development strategies, but challenges remain in balancing additional burdens on partners.
Unicef guideline for monitoring and evaluationSM Lalon
This document provides an overview of UNICEF's guide for monitoring and evaluation. It discusses the importance of monitoring and evaluation for improving programs, demonstrating accountability, and strengthening national capacity. The introduction defines monitoring as the periodic oversight of implementation to track progress and ensure corrective actions, while evaluation attempts to determine the relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, and impact of activities in light of objectives. It emphasizes that both tools are for management and learning. The guide covers organizing monitoring and evaluation within UNICEF and at the country level, with the goals of improving management, learning from experience, strengthening national capacity, and meeting donor requirements.
This document provides 10 helpful hints for planning and executing a successful training program for an ERP implementation project. The hints include: kicking off training at project launch; coordinating efforts between change management, training, and communications teams; basing the training team on client SMEs; hiring experienced training leads and augmenting with motivation; maximizing use of accelerated documentation tools; reducing review cycle times; understanding full lifecycle training needs and costs; investing in customized content; gaining midlevel management buy-in; and preparing end users for training delivery. Following these hints can help avoid common pitfalls and ensure the training program is effective in readying the organization for the ERP transition.
Outreach & Recruitment Guide for One-Stops and Community OrgsAmy Rist
As Project Director representing a healthcare employer for an innovative regional partnership program, I developed this comprehensive recruitment strategy that helped us draw from a diverse, untapped population when recruiting for our sector program. Leading the development process along with our local One Stop Career Center (OSCC) and community-based organization(CBO) partners, the development of this final strategy helped to create a process not just for this grant program but for all industry job training program recruitment processes going forward.
An Exploration of the Imperatives for Successful Strategy Execution in ODL In...IOSRJBM
The study analysed the factors that influence the effectiveness of strategy execution in Open and Distance Learning institutions. The qualitative research methodology was employed with the research design taking a case study approach. Primary data were gathered through interviews and direct and participant observation methods. The study also utilized secondary data from journal publications mainly focusing on the area of strategy execution. The research population was composed of management in ODL universities in the SADC region. Respondents to the interviews were selected from ODL Universities in three SADC countries using the simple random sampling technique. The highest levels of confidentiality and ethical standards were adhered to so as to protect the integrity of the respondents and that of the Universities. The study revealed that strategy execution could be enhanced through the following; identification of institutional competences, translate strategy into explicit implementation guidelines, adapt to rapidly changing conditions, knowledgeable and engaged leadership, prudential use of resources and worker buy-in
The PCMH is a reality in 16 primary care practices in Colorado that have participated in one of the nation’s first Multi-Payer, Multi-State Patient-Centered Medical Home Pilots, along with stakeholders at both local and national levels. Convened by HealthTeamWorks, the project began in 2008 and runs through 2012.
Preparing the Way for the Clinical Nurse Leader, A Work site program Final fo...Colleen Carton Morgan
This document outlines the steps taken to develop a Clinical Nurse Leader (CNL) work site program at a major university. The author worked with university faculty and healthcare partners to design a curriculum that met AACN requirements. A needs assessment found support among students and one healthcare partner agreed to pilot the CNL role. The author developed a 2-year part-time curriculum incorporating AACN guidelines and university requirements. Challenges included gaining full commitment from partners and integrating the new role after graduation.
This project aimed to improve pediatric care coordination between primary care physicians and three specialty practices (neurology, orthopedics, pulmonology) in Michigan. The project focused on five areas: referral guidelines, records transfer, communication modalities, referral management workflows, and co-management protocols. Outcomes after one year showed improvements in access such as decreased wait times, fewer denied referrals, and increased patient and physician satisfaction. The project demonstrated how integrating care across specialties can help reduce barriers to specialty access.
Health system strengthening in LMICs and fragile states – what and how?ReBUILD for Resilience
Health system strengthening in low and middle income countries aims to improve health outcomes through strengthening the core functions and building blocks of health systems. Effective interventions strengthen governance, develop human resources, improve health facilities, and deliver high quality services. The evidence shows that multi-component interventions which reinforce each other across building blocks are most effective when designed and implemented through sustained political commitment, community engagement, capacity building, and iterative learning and adaptation to local contexts.
This document provides an overview and agenda for a two-day Results-Based Management training session hosted by the ESA Regional Office. Day 1 will cover key principles and drivers of RBM, problem analysis using various lenses, developing an outcome chain, and prioritizing strategies. Day 2 will focus on developing a results framework, monitoring and evaluation, results-based budgeting, and reporting. The training aims to help participants apply RBM principles to strengthen results-oriented and equitable programming. Sessions will provide opportunities to practice tools like problem trees, stakeholder mapping, and formulating results statements and indicators.
#Expo14NHS:Commissioning for outcomes: Equality and health inequalities at th...Jessica Barlow
Health and Care Innovation Expo: Pop up university. Day 1: Commissioning for Outcomes: Equality and Health Inequalities at the Heart of Project Planning.
Angela N Mkandla, Fiona Pearson, Permjeet Dhoot, Sharon Benford & Hayley Haycock.
#Expo14NHS
Introduction
Planning
Definitions
Components
Types of health planning
Steps in planning process
Introduction
Planning
Definitions
Components
Types of health planning
Steps in planning process
Evaluation
Definitions..
Types
Steps in evaluation
Frame work for evaluation of public health program.
Conclusion.
References.
Creative Commons es una organización sin fines de lucro que permite compartir y usar la creatividad y el conocimiento a través de licencias gratuitas. Apunta a apoyar un dominio público más rico al ofrecer una alternativa a "todos los derechos reservados" del copyright. Existen varias licencias Creative Commons que permiten a los autores decidir cómo circulará su obra en Internet.
Measurement of information disaster through technological method modelstcnknu
This document presents a technological method model for measuring information disaster. It reviews how information disasters occur when an information technology system becomes unstable, and the need to assess disaster risk numerically. The model shows how problem complexity, resource selection/preparedness, and technological process selection/operations interact multiplicatively to determine outcomes and probability of problems. The measurement uses values from 1-9 normalized to 0-1, with higher values indicating higher probability of success and lower probability of problems. The model effectively describes how variables relate to cause information disasters and assess disaster probability.
This document appears to be promoting a franchise opportunity for The Swiss Laundry, a dry cleaning and laundry service company based in India. It provides information on the company's services and concepts from Europe. It highlights the complete support provided to franchisees, from site selection to training to marketing assistance. The document also outlines the investment amounts required for different sized franchise locations and notes the company's goal of expanding their presence across India.
Este documento presenta una aplicación llamada Francisca de las Llagas que permite editar y publicar blogs. Incluye características como edición WYSIWYG, publicación de fotos y mapas, y es compatible con plataformas como SharePoint, Blogger y WordPress. También describe las ventajas y desventajas de usar OpenOffice en comparación con Microsoft Office.
The document contains announcements for several opera performances by the Bel Cantanti Opera, including productions of Massenet's Cinderella, Kalman's The Princess of Gsardas, and Pergolesi's La Serva Padrona. It also includes the libretto for a section of Bach's Coffee Cantata. The performances are scheduled between October and December at various venues in the Washington D.C. and Maryland areas.
Chinese New Year is celebrated in February by Chinese people outside at night with kids carrying lanterns and dressing up as dragons while families clean their houses, as the festival marks the start of a new year according to the Chinese calendar and is an opportunity for people to learn from their mistakes in the previous year.
O documento fornece links para um catálogo de produtos, registro e compras em um site de e-commerce, um programa de afiliados e um blog com informações sobre os produtos da empresa.
Este documento define una hoja de cálculo y describe las características del programa Calc. Calc es un programa de hoja de cálculo poderoso e intuitivo para usuarios nuevos y profesionales. Ofrece funciones avanzadas como tablas dinámicas, fórmulas en lenguaje natural, asistentes y plantillas. Las hojas de cálculo tienen elementos como barras, pantallas y funciones. Calc también soporta formatos de Excel y archivos PDF.
Este documento presenta un proyecto de aula que tiene como objetivo mostrar la injusticia y corrupción en la cárcel La Modelo de Bogotá a través de un video y una breve explicación sobre la entrada de los familiares. El proyecto busca que los estudiantes reflexionen sobre cómo una mala decisión no solo los afecta a ellos, sino también a sus seres queridos. Entre los alcances se encuentra brindar información a los familiares sobre los derechos de los reclusos y el régimen penitenciario, mientras que entre las limitaciones
Este documento contiene información sobre la historia y características de la música K-Pop de Corea del Sur. Explica que el género surgió en la década de 1990 con grupos como Seo Taiji and Boys que incorporaron géneros occidentales. También describe las principales características de la música K-Pop como sus ritmos bailables, letras pegadizas, elaborados videos musicales y la producción en masa de nuevos artistas.
Outreach & Recruitment Guide for One-Stops and Community OrgsAmy Rist
As Project Director representing a healthcare employer for an innovative regional partnership program, I developed this comprehensive recruitment strategy that helped us draw from a diverse, untapped population when recruiting for our sector program. Leading the development process along with our local One Stop Career Center (OSCC) and community-based organization(CBO) partners, the development of this final strategy helped to create a process not just for this grant program but for all industry job training program recruitment processes going forward.
An Exploration of the Imperatives for Successful Strategy Execution in ODL In...IOSRJBM
The study analysed the factors that influence the effectiveness of strategy execution in Open and Distance Learning institutions. The qualitative research methodology was employed with the research design taking a case study approach. Primary data were gathered through interviews and direct and participant observation methods. The study also utilized secondary data from journal publications mainly focusing on the area of strategy execution. The research population was composed of management in ODL universities in the SADC region. Respondents to the interviews were selected from ODL Universities in three SADC countries using the simple random sampling technique. The highest levels of confidentiality and ethical standards were adhered to so as to protect the integrity of the respondents and that of the Universities. The study revealed that strategy execution could be enhanced through the following; identification of institutional competences, translate strategy into explicit implementation guidelines, adapt to rapidly changing conditions, knowledgeable and engaged leadership, prudential use of resources and worker buy-in
The PCMH is a reality in 16 primary care practices in Colorado that have participated in one of the nation’s first Multi-Payer, Multi-State Patient-Centered Medical Home Pilots, along with stakeholders at both local and national levels. Convened by HealthTeamWorks, the project began in 2008 and runs through 2012.
Preparing the Way for the Clinical Nurse Leader, A Work site program Final fo...Colleen Carton Morgan
This document outlines the steps taken to develop a Clinical Nurse Leader (CNL) work site program at a major university. The author worked with university faculty and healthcare partners to design a curriculum that met AACN requirements. A needs assessment found support among students and one healthcare partner agreed to pilot the CNL role. The author developed a 2-year part-time curriculum incorporating AACN guidelines and university requirements. Challenges included gaining full commitment from partners and integrating the new role after graduation.
This project aimed to improve pediatric care coordination between primary care physicians and three specialty practices (neurology, orthopedics, pulmonology) in Michigan. The project focused on five areas: referral guidelines, records transfer, communication modalities, referral management workflows, and co-management protocols. Outcomes after one year showed improvements in access such as decreased wait times, fewer denied referrals, and increased patient and physician satisfaction. The project demonstrated how integrating care across specialties can help reduce barriers to specialty access.
Health system strengthening in LMICs and fragile states – what and how?ReBUILD for Resilience
Health system strengthening in low and middle income countries aims to improve health outcomes through strengthening the core functions and building blocks of health systems. Effective interventions strengthen governance, develop human resources, improve health facilities, and deliver high quality services. The evidence shows that multi-component interventions which reinforce each other across building blocks are most effective when designed and implemented through sustained political commitment, community engagement, capacity building, and iterative learning and adaptation to local contexts.
This document provides an overview and agenda for a two-day Results-Based Management training session hosted by the ESA Regional Office. Day 1 will cover key principles and drivers of RBM, problem analysis using various lenses, developing an outcome chain, and prioritizing strategies. Day 2 will focus on developing a results framework, monitoring and evaluation, results-based budgeting, and reporting. The training aims to help participants apply RBM principles to strengthen results-oriented and equitable programming. Sessions will provide opportunities to practice tools like problem trees, stakeholder mapping, and formulating results statements and indicators.
#Expo14NHS:Commissioning for outcomes: Equality and health inequalities at th...Jessica Barlow
Health and Care Innovation Expo: Pop up university. Day 1: Commissioning for Outcomes: Equality and Health Inequalities at the Heart of Project Planning.
Angela N Mkandla, Fiona Pearson, Permjeet Dhoot, Sharon Benford & Hayley Haycock.
#Expo14NHS
Introduction
Planning
Definitions
Components
Types of health planning
Steps in planning process
Introduction
Planning
Definitions
Components
Types of health planning
Steps in planning process
Evaluation
Definitions..
Types
Steps in evaluation
Frame work for evaluation of public health program.
Conclusion.
References.
Creative Commons es una organización sin fines de lucro que permite compartir y usar la creatividad y el conocimiento a través de licencias gratuitas. Apunta a apoyar un dominio público más rico al ofrecer una alternativa a "todos los derechos reservados" del copyright. Existen varias licencias Creative Commons que permiten a los autores decidir cómo circulará su obra en Internet.
Measurement of information disaster through technological method modelstcnknu
This document presents a technological method model for measuring information disaster. It reviews how information disasters occur when an information technology system becomes unstable, and the need to assess disaster risk numerically. The model shows how problem complexity, resource selection/preparedness, and technological process selection/operations interact multiplicatively to determine outcomes and probability of problems. The measurement uses values from 1-9 normalized to 0-1, with higher values indicating higher probability of success and lower probability of problems. The model effectively describes how variables relate to cause information disasters and assess disaster probability.
This document appears to be promoting a franchise opportunity for The Swiss Laundry, a dry cleaning and laundry service company based in India. It provides information on the company's services and concepts from Europe. It highlights the complete support provided to franchisees, from site selection to training to marketing assistance. The document also outlines the investment amounts required for different sized franchise locations and notes the company's goal of expanding their presence across India.
Este documento presenta una aplicación llamada Francisca de las Llagas que permite editar y publicar blogs. Incluye características como edición WYSIWYG, publicación de fotos y mapas, y es compatible con plataformas como SharePoint, Blogger y WordPress. También describe las ventajas y desventajas de usar OpenOffice en comparación con Microsoft Office.
The document contains announcements for several opera performances by the Bel Cantanti Opera, including productions of Massenet's Cinderella, Kalman's The Princess of Gsardas, and Pergolesi's La Serva Padrona. It also includes the libretto for a section of Bach's Coffee Cantata. The performances are scheduled between October and December at various venues in the Washington D.C. and Maryland areas.
Chinese New Year is celebrated in February by Chinese people outside at night with kids carrying lanterns and dressing up as dragons while families clean their houses, as the festival marks the start of a new year according to the Chinese calendar and is an opportunity for people to learn from their mistakes in the previous year.
O documento fornece links para um catálogo de produtos, registro e compras em um site de e-commerce, um programa de afiliados e um blog com informações sobre os produtos da empresa.
Este documento define una hoja de cálculo y describe las características del programa Calc. Calc es un programa de hoja de cálculo poderoso e intuitivo para usuarios nuevos y profesionales. Ofrece funciones avanzadas como tablas dinámicas, fórmulas en lenguaje natural, asistentes y plantillas. Las hojas de cálculo tienen elementos como barras, pantallas y funciones. Calc también soporta formatos de Excel y archivos PDF.
Este documento presenta un proyecto de aula que tiene como objetivo mostrar la injusticia y corrupción en la cárcel La Modelo de Bogotá a través de un video y una breve explicación sobre la entrada de los familiares. El proyecto busca que los estudiantes reflexionen sobre cómo una mala decisión no solo los afecta a ellos, sino también a sus seres queridos. Entre los alcances se encuentra brindar información a los familiares sobre los derechos de los reclusos y el régimen penitenciario, mientras que entre las limitaciones
Este documento contiene información sobre la historia y características de la música K-Pop de Corea del Sur. Explica que el género surgió en la década de 1990 con grupos como Seo Taiji and Boys que incorporaron géneros occidentales. También describe las principales características de la música K-Pop como sus ritmos bailables, letras pegadizas, elaborados videos musicales y la producción en masa de nuevos artistas.
The document discusses Devlon Infotech Pvt. Ltd., an Indian company that provides services including brand activation, technical consulting, digital events, design and art, mobile app and game development, print and web services, and cake design. It thanks the viewer for watching its presentation and provides contact information for the company including addresses, phone numbers, and social media profiles.
This proposal suggests developing a game for Ben and Jerry's Facebook page that allows fans to build a personal list of their favorite flavors by playing a game that "pits" two flavors against each other. By playing, fans would create a list of flavors they haven't tried before. Ben and Jerry's could then use this unique, personal list to offer fans discounts to try those undiscovered flavors. The game would be developed as a Facebook Canvas Application. It would take players between 2-10 minutes to complete their personal list by making flavor comparisons. The goal is to encourage fan engagement while providing targeted marketing offers.
Eliminating the top 5 challenges for STPsPhil Trickey
The document discusses the top 5 challenges facing Sustainability and Transformation Partnerships (STPs) in designing and delivering plans: 1) Coherence, 2) Clarity, 3) Consistency, 4) Collaboration, and 5) Control. It provides details on each challenge and suggests that the complexity of the healthcare system and traditional siloed approaches have caused these issues. To address Coherence, the document recommends taking a structured approach to create a plan with objectives, key performance indicators, and programs of work. For Clarity, it suggests using business management software to consolidate requirements and translate strategy into action. To eliminate the challenges, the document advises taking a portfolio approach to transformation focused on desired outcomes.
Social work: Crafting Goals and Objectivesbernie3524
This document discusses the importance of clearly defining goals and objectives when developing new programs or interventions. It emphasizes that goals and objectives should be crafted during the planning stage and should address key questions like what the program aims to accomplish and how it will help clients. Goals should be measurable, logically linked to identifying client needs and problems, and connected to how the program will be implemented. Clearly articulating goals and objectives provides direction for the program and a framework for evaluation to assess effectiveness.
This document provides an overview of developing a behaviour change communication (BCC) strategy in multiple chapters. It discusses that a successful BCC strategy follows a systematic process including analysis, budgeting, strategic design, developing and pre-testing messages, implementation, and monitoring and evaluation. It also summarizes the "Goli ki Hamjoli" campaign in India as an example of an effective BCC intervention that addressed myths around oral contraceptives through formative research, direct and interpersonal communication, and a mass media campaign targeting different audience stages.
Draft evaluation plan provided to client that contains a summary, evaluation needs, evaluation content, purpose, evaluation model design, and evaluation schedule
The document discusses the role of quality health journalism in supporting social and behavior change efforts. It notes that good journalism can create an enabling environment for SBCC success, while misinformation from poor journalism can undermine SBCC interventions. The resource aims to explain how the news media can contribute to SBCC initiatives by providing objective information, space for differing perspectives, and helping audiences consider issues critically based on evidence.
Strategic planning provides a roadmap for where a healthcare organization is going and how to get there. It guides decisions on capital, technology, staff and other resources. The strategic planning process involves 7 steps: 1) reviewing the vision and mission, 2) analyzing strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, 3) developing strategic options, 4) establishing objectives, 5) creating an execution plan, 6) allocating budgets and resources, and 7) ongoing review. When done correctly, strategic planning creates a culture of innovation, improves decision-making and resource allocation, and helps organizations deliver high-quality care by shaping their future.
PGodfrey_Automation of Plan of Care_Practicum1_ ProjectPaul Godfrey
This document discusses a project to automate the plan of care process for patients managed by a care management organization outside of traditional healthcare institutions. The project aims to address the complexities involved in coordinating care for many patients remotely. Automating tasks, interventions, and documentation in the plan of care process could help clinicians more effectively manage large caseloads. The project objectives are to highlight challenges with remote care management, propose automating the care planning process, and educate interdisciplinary teams on using related technology. Stakeholders include various clinical, IT, and management teams. The project timeline and cost analysis are also outlined.
In this presentation, we review social media efforts in the healthcare industry, the five different stages of social media programs and what healthcare organizations can do to set themselves up for social media success.
The document discusses the implementation of a performance management system in an IT service desk organization. It describes the background of the organization and the need for a performance management solution to address issues. It analyzes three approaches and recommends the best one. It then discusses the goals, objectives, and implementation process including communication, project structure, and risk mitigation. Finally, it covers an evaluation and reporting program to monitor the performance management program.
This document discusses health care planning and strategic management. It begins by defining planning as determining goals and means for achieving them. There are different types of planning including operational, tactical, and strategic planning. Strategic planning involves developing an organization's mission, vision, goals, and objectives. The planning process involves situational analysis, which identifies community health needs and available resources through stakeholder analysis and a SWOT analysis. Planning can use top-down, bottom-up, or hybrid approaches. The key steps of planning include situational analysis, identifying objectives, prioritizing actions, and determining required resources.
Grading Rubric
F
F
C
B
A
0
1
2
3
4
No Pass
No Pass
Competence
Proficiency
Mastery
Not Submitted
No identification of customer service plan that will create an exceptional customer experience program, missing basic features and support.
Identifies customer service plan that will create an exceptional customer experience program, but lacks explanation of basic features.
Identifies customer service plan that will create an exceptional customer experience program with explanation and supports stance.
Identifies customer service plan that will create an exceptional customer experience program, fully explains features and supports stance.
Not Submitted
No selection of operational practices that will create an exceptional customer experience.
Selects operational practices that will create an exceptional customer experience, but lacks explanation and personal examples.
Selects operational practices that will create an exceptional customer experience with explanation and personal examples.
Selects operational practices that will create an exceptional customer experience with fully supported personal examples and explanation.
Not Submitted
No noticeable attempt to define exceptional customer experience.
Correctly defines one key aspect of the exceptional customer experience; attempts to define another.
Correctly defines key aspect of the exceptional customer experience.
Correctly defines one key aspect of the exceptional customer experience with supporting research.
Not Submitted
No noticeable attempt to explain how an Emerging Leader will develop team members to implement an exceptional customer experience.
Attempts to explain how an Emerging Leader will develop team members to implement an exceptional customer experience with some supporting evidence.
Explains how an Emerging Leader will develop team members to implement an exceptional customer experience with supporting evidence.
Thoroughly explains how an Emerging Leader will develop team members to implement an exceptional customer experience with strong supporting evidence.
Not Submitted
No identification of metrics used to measure the effectiveness of an exceptional customer experience program.
Attempts to define metrics used to measure the effectiveness of an exceptional customer experience program with minimal supporting information.
Describes metrics used to measure the effectiveness of an exceptional customer experience program with supporting information.
Defines metrics used to measure the effectiveness of an exceptional customer experience program with strong supporting evidence.
Not Submitted
No discussion of how an Emerging Leader will use metrics to sustain and maintain an organizational exceptional customer experience program.
Attempt to discuss how an Emerging Leader will use metrics to sustain and maintain an organizational exceptional customer, but lacks full explanation and examples.
Discusses how an Emerging Leader will use metrics to sustain and maintain an organizational excep ...
Chapter 101. Describe the concepts and models of plann.docxcravennichole326
Chapter 10
1. Describe the concepts and models of planning and decision making in the context of the healthcare supply chain.
2. Discuss the importance of situational factors (trends, environmental issues, technology, regulatory compliance, etc…) in the planning process and how leadership principles, metrics and improvement tenets can be used to positively impact the organizational culture of healthcare supply chain operations.
3. Relate, discuss and provide areas of integration between planning and decision making amid continuous operations of the healthcare supply chain to include the use of metrics and improvement strategies.
4. Distinguish the differences between planning and contingency planning.
5. Merge principles of leadership, planning and decision making to develop a personal plan for operating in a fast paced healthcare supply chain environment.
6. Evaluate the benefits for organizational operations with a solid planning process and standing operating procedures as part of the healthcare supply chain culture to include outside sales representatives.
Chapter 10: Building a Culture of Healthcare Supply Chain Excellence: Leading, Planning, Managing, Deciding, and Learning
Learning Objectives
Describe the concepts and models of planning and decision making in the context of the healthcare supply chain.
Discuss the importance of situational factors (trends, environmental issues, technology, regulatory compliance, etc…) in the planning process and how leadership principles, metrics and improvement tenets can be used to positively impact the organizational culture of healthcare supply chain operations.
Relate, discuss and provide areas of integration between planning and decision making amid continuous operations of the healthcare supply chain to include the use of metrics and improvement strategies.
Distinguish the differences between planning and contingency planning.
Merge principles of leadership, planning and decision making to develop a personal plan for operating in a fast paced healthcare supply chain environment.
Evaluate the benefits for organizational operations with a solid planning process and standing operating procedures as part of the healthcare supply chain culture to include outside sales representatives.
Introduction
Planning and decision making are essential to efficient, effective and efficacious healthcare supply chain operations and strategies.
Leaders and managers must structure and facilitate plans that integrate well with the healthcare organization’s strategic plan and must make consistent decisions in alignment with those plans.
Creating standing operating procedures for routine and consistent operations of the supply chain allows leaders and managers to spread the operational culture at all levels of the supply chain enterprise.
This chapter provides an overview of planning, improvement strategies, metrics, regulatory compliance and decision making.
These constructs should be reviewed and ...
This document discusses how hospitals and healthcare systems can leverage social media for real business impact. It outlines some of the challenges they face, including having dispersed social media programs across different departments, a lack of clear goals and metrics, and not linking social media activities to financial outcomes. It recommends that organizations accelerate the evolution of their social media programs by more deeply integrating social media into their operations through a centralized program with formal partnerships between departments, consistent messaging, and data-driven decision making that can link program activities to financial results.
This 'how to' guide builds upon the overarching framework set out in The route to success in end of life care - achieving quality in acute hospitals, published in 2010. The route to success highlighted best practice models developed by acute hospital Trusts, providing a comprehensive framework to enable hospitals to deliver high quality care to people at the end of life.
This 'how to' guide aims to help clinicians, managers and directors implement The route to success more effectively, drawing on valuable learning from the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement's Productive Ward: Releasing time to care™ series.
This guide contains individual sections that can be worked on in any given order, dependent upon the individual hospital and its current end of life care provisions. These can be downloaded below:
Introduction
Section 1: prepare
Section 2: assess and diagnose
Section 3: plan
Section 4: treat
Section 5: evaluate
Section 6: sustain
Section 7: further resources
Cover
It places emphasis on existing 'enabling' tools and models, which support and follow a person-centred pathway. These are Advance Care Planning, Electronic Palliative Care Co-ordination Systems (EPaCCS), AMBER Care Bundle, Rapid Discharge Home to Die Pathway, and the Liverpool Care Pathway.
Publication by the National End of Life Programme which became part of NHS Improving Quality in May 2013
The document discusses education planning and developing education sector plans. It provides details on the general 5-step process for developing an education sector plan: 1) setting up a taskforce, 2) analysing the sector, 3) prioritizing policies and programs, 4) developing the plan, and 5) implementing, monitoring and evaluating. It also discusses key considerations for each step, such as engaging stakeholders and conducting consultations. Additionally, it covers issues with education data, the role of demographic projections and financial modeling, and international trends that impact education planning.
This document discusses eHealth strategies and the benefits they provide to patients, healthcare providers, and health systems. It analyzes the key stakeholders in large-scale eHealth projects, including primary/secondary healthcare centers, health insurances, hospitals, pharmacies, and nursing homes. Large eHealth projects involve many institutions that each have their own goals and agendas. Successful projects require identifying these stakeholders, describing the system benefits for each, and finding solutions that balance their various requirements through transparency and discussion.
The pilot sites report their findings for end of life care communication skills
22 September 2010 - National End of Life Care Programme
This report provides the first round of feedback from a training needs analysis (TNA) pilot project, set up to support the development of communication skills training for all those working in end of life care.
It provides some early outcomes and learning from 12 pilot sites around the country, each of which carried out its own local workforce TNA. We hope these initial findings will be useful to other organisations planning to carry out a TNA themselves, or to support the development of EoLC training plans. A series of 'top tips' are summarised in the document.
Publication by the National End of Life Programme which became part of NHS Improving Quality in May 2013
1. 51
33333 Managing Communication for Behavior Change
Assigning Responsibility
As part of communication planning, it is critical to decide who will carry
out each step and how each will be managed. This is one of the most
difficult dilemmas in planning projects that have extensive communica-
tion activities. In family planning, major programs are often implemented
by parastatals that frequently have some capacity to do CBC work. How-
ever, in health and nutrition, the implementor is usually a government
ministry, most likely the ministry of health, possibly the ministry of educa-
tion or agriculture. Within the ministry of health, the choices, most often,
are two: place CBC with the technical unit, e.g. the nutrition or MCH (ma-
ternal and child health) division, or place it in the health education unit.
There is no correct answer. There are successful examples of each, and
in some cases a model combining the two may be best. Depending on
the level of political will behind the project, other units such as the
minister’s office or a coordinating ministry may be best. What is important
is that a focal point for strategy development and execution be identified.
It is not recommended to contract private companies or nongovernmen-
tal organizations (NGOs) for managing the process. Although it may well
be appropriate to rely on advertising firms and NGOs specialized in pub-
lic relations, education, or communication for certain technical functions
(discussed in Appendix E), this does not release the ministry from its
responsibility to manage the different phases of social marketing. One
reason is that many social marketing activities require direct and con-
tinual negotiations, which cannot be managed by external parties. These
negotiations are often required with the directors of private health pro-
grams, drug supply, the media or other specific programs . Even if the
strategy is essentially a communication strategy, the ministry still must
coordinate among its various divisions, the Bank, other organizations in
country, and private contractors.
During the CBC development process and in supervision, there must be
a continuous interplay between the creative and the technical aspects of
2. 52
messages that requires direct work with the technical programs. Supervi-
sion is also important later in the distribution of materials, and in some
cases motivational efforts are required at all levels. This can be managed
only within the ministry.
Box 7 contains skills and characteristics to look for in a CBC manager.
Below are questions to ask to determine the type of management unit to
establish. However, regardless of these choices, establishing an advisory
group and/or a working group that includes the management unit but
also other key individuals can be important: in bringing a full complement
of skills to address the problems; to ensure that all groups are informed
of decisions on CBC; that all groups can express their needs, sugges-
tions, and opinions; and that professional help is readily available to
strengthen the responsible agency. Several types of committees or
groups are common.
• A small advisory group of leading communication professionals may
meet periodically with the director of, for example, health education.
Members discuss programs and problems and offer assistance in
locating resources to strengthen the work of health education.
• A steering committee, comprised of program representatives or key
stakeholders, is convened periodically to discuss and offer guidance
on the implementation of a particular program of common interest and
to evaluate overall technical direction.
• A working group is formed from among the partner’s staff doing most
of the day-to-day, or more frequent, decision-making on CBC activi-
ties. They may work in their own offices but meet together at least
once a week.
1. What skills are required in a management unit?
Generally, there are three basic functions that need to be covered: (a)
research, monitoring and evaluation; (b) communication—message strat-
3. 53
Box 7. Considerations for CBC Program Management
In choosing a focal point to manage CBC, the management abilities
of the director may be as important as the staff’s capabilities. The
skills required include:
Advocacy: CBC managers need to be good advocates for their pro-
gram and skilled in promoting its strengths and successes at all op-
portunities. In addition, good diplomatic and negotiating skills may
well be required to meld the desires of several diverse technical
programs into a coherent communication program. Both the institu-
tion and person should have a standing that facilitates this.
Resource mobilization: In addition to knowing how to budget for
CBC activities, a good manager should know how to harness the
resources of other organizations, agencies, and media to supplement
CBC program budgets.
Contract management and supervision: Managers may need to
oversee processes of planning, awarding, and managing, and super-
vising contracts for a number of research and materials-develop-
ment activities.
Monitoring and evaluation: The hallmark of a good CBC manager
and management system is the ability to efficiently respond to nec-
essary program changes and service demands. The development
and implementation of processes for tracking the performance of
project activities and for evaluating activities are critical exercises
that the manager must plan and coordinate. The institution or divi-
sion must be respected to be able to perform this function and must
be open to what is learned.
4. 54
egy and media planning, materials development and production; and (c)
management—overall coordination of the CBC process and communica-
tion activities, monitoring and supporting locally planned communication
activities in support of the project, contracting as needed and managing
contracts, liaison with the service delivery/nutrition or health technical
side, advocacy and resource mobilization. Training may be an additional
requirement.
2. Who has these skills and where does it make sense to concentrate
management?
The skills required to design and implement a comprehensive CBC pro-
gram are usually located in both public and private sector agencies.
• Research expertise is most often located outside the ministry, so the
common issue is who should manage the group conducting the re-
search. Management should normally be in the CBC focal point, but in
planning research, there should be close collaboration among the
experts in technical health and nutrition areas, the private research
group, and CBC focal point.
• Communications expertise usually resides in the health education unit
and/or an office of external affairs and in private sector groups. People
within a ministry often need to and want to determine the technical
content and often know the media, how to get items printed or re-
corded, etc. They can usually manage these aspects and should be
the ones to work with any advertising firm or media consultants hired
from outside. However, the creative aspects of communication work
are usually best handled by a private sector firm—an advertising
agency or materials development group. In countries that lack adver-
tising agencies or organized creative resources, the CBC focal point
may have to convene/contract creative individuals and form an alli-
ance among them.
• The service delivery/health and nutrition technical side is found in the
health and nutrition program units, although NGOs can be helpful.
5. 55
Making a health or nutrition program unit the focal point, while often ex-
pedient because the health system operates this way, may duplicate
services/skills within the same institution and decrease chances for coor-
dination with other health CBC activities. In a worst case scenario, this
could mean that conflicting messages are disseminated. Also, such ef-
forts tend to remain narrowly focussed on a few specific consumer be-
havior changes and not work as much on advocacy or program support
activities.
When the health education unit or its equivalent becomes the focal point,
the skills and activities are centralized, facilitating coordination of re-
search and strategy development across programs. Also, more attention
will be paid to cross-cutting problems such as the image of the health
services, which no one program may want to tackle but which may be a
key barrier to achieving many of its objectives.
Disadvantages may include the health education unit’s low status, so
that it coordinates from a weak position. Health education staff may be
reluctant to contract out for design skills, trying to keep the task “in-
house” even if quality could be better elsewhere. Another problem is that
the budget for specific CBC work may reside in one unit such as health
education but the program responsibility in another. And often, in an
attempt to bring everything under one umbrella, too much is grouped
together, so research is too broad and loses needed specificity to guide
the design of messages to improve health or nutrition-related behavior.
The separation between the communication and the technical program
may mean that central technical or service-delivery information does not
get transmitted. Here, a worse case would be that the communications
gets ahead of the service delivery, with people expecting services the
system cannot reliably deliver.
One community health and nutrition program combined the two basic
approaches. The focal point was a health education unit that had: (1)
managers for specific health programs (MCH, nutrition, CDD, EPI, AIDS,
etc.); (2) a research unit skilled in supervising and contracting out for
6. 56
research; and (3) a media/materials unit skilled in developing communi-
cations strategy and working with private sector resources. Because the
managers in the health education unit were not necessarily program
specialists in the areas they managed, each health program designated
a CBC manager to coordinate closely with the manager in health educa-
tion. The person in the health program who managed the entire strategy
tried to ensure good linkages between the CBC and service-delivery
activities.
3. Is the CBC activity a time-limited, narrowly focussed activity
or a longer-term program covering many topics?
If the activity is narrow, it may make sense to locate it in the technical
division, while the longer-term, broader program perhaps should be man-
aged from a unit such as health education or a coordinating ministry or
consumer affairs bureau.
Contracting for Services
Communication program development and implementation requires a
wide variety of skills, some of which can best be accessed through con-
tracting. Contracting saves the costs of building large units comprised of
all the requisite skills that may not be in demand full time. It also saves on
the purchase of expensive production equipment. Contracting may also
give the program access to the most up-to-date and skilled people in
consumer persuasion and media use. They may also have the latest
graphics technology, saving time and money later.
However, even if contractors are good at what they do, the responsible
agency must manage their work well or the products may fall short or the
program will be fragmented. The responsible agency must know how to
prepare accurate terms of references and bid work, evaluate proposals,
contract for the required tasks, and manage the contract in an efficient
manner to avoid delays and unsatisfactory products. Management unit
7. 57
personnel should go to the field as often as possible, both to supervise
work and to learn. The Bank manager may wish to have CBC consultants
on supervision missions to help oversee these processes.
The services that are more frequently contracted are research (both
qualitative and quantitative) and creative executions (designing materials
that not only contain the essential messages but express them in an ar-
resting and memorable way) and media placement (usually to an adver-
tising agency, production house, or public relations firm). Recently,
programs that want to reach the community in a sustained way through
community-based workers, have written implementation agreements with
NGOs that have extensive community networks. The box, Organizational
Support for CBC Activities, gives examples of such partnerships and
alliances. Appendix E offers some tips on contracting with private sector
agencies.
Managing Resources and Costs
This section discusses the mechanics of the project. It begins by analyz-
ing each project phase in terms of what is required (inputs) and who is
responsible. For each activity, the required resources should be planned,
including additional staff, services of outside organizations, training for
staff, and equipment. What this means is that a detailed component work
plan, including a time line, should be developed so that required resources
can be identified with the project year in which they will be needed.
The resources section of the CBC plan should include:
• a preliminary list of resources required for each activity phase (number
of research activities (qualitative and quantitative), persons respon-
sible, capacity-building course (in and out of country), seminars/work-
shops, contracts with creative resources, media time, materials
development and reproduction, training in interpersonal communica-
tion for field staff, supervision, monitoring activities, etc.;
8. 58 Table 4. Organizational Support for CBC Activities
Types of
Program Support Organizational Options
1. Analysis Executing/Responsible Agency, with technical support from a research
organization
2. Project Design/ Public Sector
Planning • Technical Units
• Health education division
• Public relations unit
• Planning unit
Parastatal
• Technical units
• IE&C unit of large NGO
3. Research University
• Epidemiology or nutrition department
• Anthropology department
• Mass communications department
Private Sector
• Market research firms
• Advertising agencies with in-house research department
Quasi/Parastatal
• Evaluation and research units
4. Message and Public Sector
Materials Design • IE&C audiovisual centers
• Health education division
• Technical units in Ministry of Information & Broadcasting
Parastatal
• Media production centers
Universities
• Audiovisual centers
Private Sector
• Advertising & public relations firms
• Materials production groups
• Freelance artists, writers, drama troupes, singers
5. Training Public Sector
• Training units
• Community development division
Universities
Private Sector
• Training institutes
• Private contractors
• NGOs
Types of
9. 59
Types of
Program Support Organizational Options
6. Printing Public Sector
• Government printers
University
• Press/printers
Private Sector
• Commercial printers
7. Product Develop- Public Sector
ment (communi- • Technical units
cations groups
may see a need Private Sector
for a product as • Private companies (e.g. that produce fortified foods, iron pills,
part of the strat- a child feeding bowl)
egy and advise
on product University
development) • Research lab
8. Product Mar- Private Sector
keting • Advertising agency with a marketing division
• Marketing group
9. Materials/Pro- Public Sector
duct Distribution • Collaborating ministries, e.g., labor, agriculture, community
services, education, etc.
Private Sector
• Food companies & their distributors
• Pharmaceutical companies
• Local chemists/pharmacists
• Non-governmental organizations
10. Evaluation (not University
usually con- • Epidemiology or nutrition department
ducted by the • Mass communications department
implementing • Anthropology/social sciences department
agency, to
avoid bias) Parastatal
• Market research agency
Private Sector
• Market research agency
10. 60
• a project work plan/schedule that addresses the logistics of the effort,
taking into account the constraints of time, availability of trained per-
sonnel, and the budget;
• terms of reference for specific staff and support institutions to be used
to implement each task, technical assistance, special studies, and
project monitoring and evaluation.
The resources for each activity should be summarized in the budget.
Standard budget categories are:
Staff
Costs include salaries, benefits, per diem, travel.
Research
Costs for research may be broken down and covered under staff, con-
tracts and other direct costs. Types of research will include formative,
pretesting, monitoring, and evaluation research.
Training
• to help develop local CBC institutional capabilities
• to improve service-provider skills and knowledge
• to manage CBC activities
Communications
• media/materials development (general identification). Do not try to
price individual items but put a price on a multi-media package. Re-
member that these are costs to develop the prototypes plus costs to
reproduce the final materials
11. 61
• community outreach, e.g. campaigns, folk theater, etc.
• media time, both the initial launch activities as well as sustained airing
Hardware and equipment, e.g. vehicles, audiovisual equipment, phone
lines, fax machines, computers with graphics software.
Other direct costs
• local transport expenses
• maintenance of vehicles
• office operational expenses
• national and international communication
Civil works, e.g. construction of an audiovisual media center, expansion
of the Health Education Unit
Technical assistance
• short and long-term consultant needs—national and international
• subcontracts to local organizations
When the costs of the total CBC program are evident, then those that will
be financed by the project should be noted.
Total costs will vary widely depending on:
• the geographic and technical scope of the program;
• the role(s) of CBC in the program;
• the capability of the responsible agency (is staffing adequate and
skills appropriate, or must people be hired or contracted and exten-
sive technical assistance provided?);
12. 62
• the need to purchase equipment and transport and construct rooms or
buildings;
• media costs and materials, production prices and the availability of
discounts;
• training costs both for staff development in CBC and for building skills
and motivating project workers;
• extent of work done previously;
• phase of program development (start-up costs are higher than recur-
rent costs).
Even for an infrastructure/service-delivery intervention, the CBC compo-
nent should take at least five percent of the total program costs. In a
large country that spends much of its health budget on delivering
basic packages of care through health facilities, it is not unreasonable
to think that a budget to promote these services and basic preventive
health behaviors might be 10–15% of the budget (that includes micro-
nutrient supplements, food, etc.) or about one million dollars per year. If
the project is solely or more heavily aimed at improving nutrition prac-
tices, then the CBC budget would constitute a much higher proportion of
the total since it would be responsible for delivering the main “service.”
Rough estimates of the percentage of the budget to be allocated to
each phase and examples of costs are listed on the next page. These
estimates are derived from budget analyses of several World Bank and
USAID-financed projects. They do not include costs for expensive
equipment such as vehicles, civil works or items such as overseas
training or extensive technical assistance.
13. 63
Table 5. Estimated Breakdown of CBC Budget by Phase
Approx.
Phase Implementor % Examples of Costs
Formative Responsible agency 15% $20,000 (limited geographic scope:
Research &/or contract with 1 state & 1 topic) to $100,000 (large
a private research firm country & an array of health topics)
Strategy Responsible agency & 5% $5,000 (workshop & development of a
Formulation collaborating groups simple strategy with few media mate-
rials) to $50,000 (more complex strat-
egy involving print, radio & film/
video prototype production & testing
and requiring consensus with more
partners).
Preparation of Responsible agency 60% $10–$80,000 for creative and design
Materials and &/or contract with work; $5–$20,000 for pretesting;
Implementation printer &/or creative $20–$200,000 for printing and media
agency(ies) + trainers’ production, depending on number
periodic technical & sophistication of materials/
assistance messages; $50–$300,000/year for
media time; $200,000/year for training,
if the project has wide geographic
scope and several administrative levels
of workers requiring training.
Monitoring/ Responsible agency + 20% $150–$250,000 for a baseline survey,
Evaluation contract with research monitoring studies & final survey
group(s) + limited for a sample of approximately 1,000
international technical households.
assistance
14. 64
Monitoring
Two related but distinct activities are needed to obtain feedback on
CBC activities: (1) monitoring the progress and the process of CBC
implementation to enable managers to improve ongoing activities;
and (2) evaluating CBC program impact, i.e. the changes in behaviors
and related knowledge and attitudes of the target audiences, and what
CBC messages, materials, and other actions worked and what did not
and why. Both monitoring and evaluation of CBC should be integrated
to the extent reasonable with overall project monitoring and evaluation.
The type of questions the monitoring should answer are:
• functioning of communication activities: Have materials been distrib-
uted through the system to the user level? Has training on counseling
been conducted as planned? Are health workers using materials, and
using them correctly? Are broadcasts and performances occurring as
planned?
• indicators of quality of communication: Are the various media reaching
all of the specific audiences as planned? How does the intended audi-
ence feel about the communication activities taking place? Do people
understand the messages? Are they receptive to the information (do
they believe and trust it)? Is there any adverse reaction? Note: If the
communication is interpersonal it is important to ascertain both the
understanding of, and belief in, the message on the part of those
transmitting, as well as receiving it.
• indicators of initial impact Have people begun to follow advice? Has
the new practice become a regular activity? Are health workers treat-
ing people better and counseling more effectively? Are people talking
about the program and its messages? Are the concepts and practices
spreading, being adopted or adapted by others? Is there any evi-
dence of health and nutrition impact?
15. 65
This information should be collect both routinely and in special studies
(called “tracking studies” by market research companies) that take place
at least every six months.
Routine monitoring includes such activities as: reviewing monthly reports
by staff members/program implementors, meeting periodically with
change agents; observing training sessions, observing change agents at
work, spot checking distribution points for products, spot checking distri-
bution end points for materials, visiting radio and/or TV stations, listening
for program materials on the radio, and discussing the program infor-
mally with the target audience to learn their opinions. Routine monitoring
can be combined with supervision, but it is not the same: both must oc-
cur. It is the task of the focal point to ensure that the program is moni-
tored. The implementing agency, especially at a decentralized level, is
responsible for project supervision.
Special studies may be needed to probe a potential problem more thor-
oughly or understand progress in quantitative terms. Tracking studies are
usually conducted with a small, randomly selected sample of the project
population. These studies are useful to verify impressions, understand
the extent of a change in perception or practice and to pinpoint where a
correction may be needed. Early positive results from tracking studies
can heighten support for the project, a critical factor in sustainability.
Although monitoring is the responsibility of the focal point and imple-
menting agency, the World Bank should encourage those responsible. If
possible, World Bank Task Managers on supervision visits should ask to
review these tracking studies and should also conduct field visits to all
levels of project implementation to supplement reports, observe counsel-
ing, talk to health providers, etc.
Evaluation
Similar to monitoring, there are a variety of methods that can be used to
evaluate impact. The most common is a pre-test/post-test method using
16. 66
large-scale, quantitative surveys with randomly selected samples. If fea-
sible and affordable, the same survey should be conducted among a
representative sample in the project area and also among a matched
population (by health and nutrition status, education, income, ethnicity,
access to media) living outside of the area. It is important, but often diffi-
cult in practice, that mass media from the project area not reach the
control area, since this “contaminates” results there. If it is impossible to
establish a control area then results from the program area should be
analyzed by level of exposure to the program. It may be important to
establish a cohort within the sample that can be looked at longitudinally.
A follow-up survey should be carried out after two years or more to look
at changes in the knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of particular popu-
lations targeted and not targeted by the program. Both surveys may in-
clude measures of growth, nutritional status, and other direct indicators
of health to verify biological impact. If biological impact is not sought
then dietary improvement documented through 24-hour recalls and food
frequencies can be done along with recall and observation of actual
practice. Such impact indicators can be compared not only between the
project and non-project populations but also among persons most
reached by the media and messages and least reached within the
project area.
Ideally, a baseline should be conducted after strategy formulation but
prior to project launch. If the baseline survey is conducted earlier in
project development, it may not include questions on some of the spe-
cific knowledge, attitudes and practices that the strategy has targeted to
change.
If a major objective is consumption of particular foods whose availability
varies seasonally, it is essential that the initial and following surveys be
conducted at the same time of the year and that the particular food be
identified, not the general class of foods, i.e. green leafy vegetables vs.
spinach. If a program is sustained over many years, surveys should be
17. 67
planned about every three years to help guide the program’s overall di-
rection. CBC evaluations examine such variables as:
• potential for exposure given actual availability of messages and
materials
• actual exposure: children regularly monitored and counseled, radio
listening
• knowledge change
• attitude change
• trials of new behaviors
• changes in key target practices, such as the percentage of mothers
who initiate breastfeeding within the first hour, who breastfeed exclu-
sively for at least four months or who seek referral for a particular
problem
• changes in health or nutrition status (not the sole responsibility of CBC
but important to include).
In addition to evaluation studies with the primary target audience (usually
the consumers of the program’s communication, products or services), it
may be important to evaluate shifts in knowledge, attitudes, and prac-
tices of service providers. Important changes may have occurred among
this population that have not yet shown their impact on consumers.
Evaluation requirements are easy to underestimate. An impact evaluation
requires skilled and experienced persons to ensure a thorough and logi-
cal research design, analysis and report. The design should include an
analysis plan that will answer the research questions being asked and a
proper sample and instruments designed in a manner that elicits true
18. 68
responses and that corroborates reported behavior by observation, when
possible. Attempts to measure changes in practices “are frequently
flawed due to the extreme difficulty of identifying and controlling com-
pounding variables.” (Perrett) Even with a good design and analysis, the
evaluation is worthless if not written in a way that programmers and
policy makers can understand the implications. Expert, experienced
guidance should be sought.
While monitoring studies should be handled in large part by program
staff, impact evaluations most often should be handled outside the pro-
gram. First, having an independent group undertake the evaluation elimi-
nates claims of bias. Second, evaluations can be extremely time
consuming and can derail program personnel from attention to manage-
ment and implementation. In the planning phase, consult an expert on
approximate costs for the baseline and follow-up survey field work, com-
puter analysis and report preparation.
The fourth and final chapter reviews some of the major challenges that
confront World Bank Task Managers in planning and managing effective
CBC for nutrition projects or project components.