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MHTF Supported Projects from 2009 to 2011


                 


The MHTF has provided support to projects around the world that address critical challenges to improving maternal health outcomes. In the MHTF's first phase, projects were selected based on these criteria:

* Identify and fill knowledge gaps
A wide range of questions identified by MHTF partners have been addressed in the projects we have supported, including: What are the barriers to the implementation of evidence-based practices in maternal health care according to front line health workers? Can recently delivered women provide information on the indications for their cesarean sections? What is the economic impact of maternal morbidity on households?

* Provide opportunities for debate and consensus building
In collaboration with prominent partners, the MHTF has convened a series public dialogues with experts on neglected and emerging maternal health issues in Washington DC and Nairobi, small technical meetings on everything from budget monitoring to indicator measurement, and the Global Maternal Health Conference in 2010 brought together over 700 researchers, policy-makers and advocates in New Delhi.

* Stimulate new thinking and new approaches
The MHTF has supported a range of innovative models for improving maternal health care such as a new business model for high quality affordable private sector maternal health care in urban slums; adapted SIM card applications for community and district health workers to track ante-natal care and provide referrals for EMOC; and the integration of maternal health concerns into disaster risk reduction and emergency preparedness policies

Here's an alphabetical listing and short descriptions of the small grants that the MHTF made in its first phase:


A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z


Ashoka
Young Champions of Maternal Health


The MHTF and Ashoka partnered to create an innovative new program that charts the future of the maternal health field. The Young Champions of Maternal Health Program is the first-ever international fellowship dedicated exclusively to grooming a new generation of maternal health leaders. The Young Champions, selected through Ashoka's Changemakers online competition and a rigorous interview process hail from 13 countries -- including India, Ethiopia, and Nigeria, countries with high maternal mortality rates. The 15 young people selected spent 9 months abroad working with and being mentored by an Ashoka Fellow with expertise in maternal health or a related field – social entrepreneurs with proven track records in providing system-changing solutions that address the world's most urgent development challenges.

BRAC
BRAC-Click m-Health Project


The BRAC–Click mHealth Project is a unique public-private partnership between BRAC and ClickDiagnostics Inc, a global mhealth pioneer, to build an innovative information and communication technologies (ICT) platform and expand the scope and impact of the existing, highly functional Manoshi Project started and implemented by BRAC. With support from the MHTF and other donors, the BRAC–Click mHealth Project is a model in which community health workers will use new and existing ICT to gather real time information about pregnant women and neonates, and provide targeted interventions. It will remodel the patient management and care system; expand monitoring and reporting processes; and implement an emergency management system that includes a single hotline tagged with ambulance and blood donation services.

Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social
Evaluation of ALSO Program


The Mexican Ministry of Health manages obstetric emergencies in Oaxaca province through the Advanced Life Support for Obstetrics Program (ALSO). Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social(CIESAS) is conducting an assessment of the program and determining whether ALSO's education and training improves the technical skills of health care providers before the government decides to scale up the ALSO program to the national level. The data collection phase of the project is underway in Oaxaca, Mexico at the Civil Hospital Dr. Aurelio Valdivieso in collaboration with the Population Council.

For an update on the project, read CIESAS' blog posts.

Future Generations
Using Pregnancy Histories to Help Mothers


Future Generations is working with the Peruvian Ministry of Health to field test a method of reducing maternal and newborn mortality through organizing groups of pregnant women to share their pregnancy histories and experiences. Health workers will guide discussions, document benefits, and develop materials that may be adopted at the national level. To date, sixty-three Women Leaders have been selected from highland Andean communities and started the training process to provide guidance to their pregnant peers.

For an update on the project, read Future Generations' blog posts.

Futures Institute
Maternal Health Content of the DHS Core Questionnaires


The MHTF hosted a 13-day online forum to gather a coordinated set of comments and recommendations for the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) core questionnaires for the current round of surveys. The Futures Institute provided background material for the forum as well as ongoing forum monitoring and facilitation. After the forum closed, the Futures Institute summarized the comments and recommendations consulted with the MHTF, and sent the information to the DHS for review. The newly revised DHS core questionnaires are available here.

Global Health Visions
U.S. Maternal Health Donors: A Landscape Analysis


Insufficient funding for maternal health has been identified as a major obstacle in achieving MDG5, so the MHTF commissioned Global Heath Visions to conduct a landscaping of all the existing and potential maternal health donors based in the US. Some experts have called for a new maternal health donor affinity group, and this landscaping explored that feasibility. As global advocacy and activism for improved maternal health outcomes accelerates, so should funding. But this report found that is not the case, at least in the US. Further explorations into non-US funding for maternal health might yield more encouraging results. The report of the GHV landscaping exercise is found here, along with some annexes that identity specific activities and portfolios of current and potential MH donors.

Maternal Health Donor Landscape Analysis Report / Annex IIIA / Annex IIIB / Annex IIIC

Harvard Medical School
Feasibility Study of the Implementation of a Preeclampsia and Eclampsia Maternal Health Checklist


The purpose of this project is to develop a novel Preeclampsia and Eclampsia Checklist, study the feasibility of implementing the checklist along with health services organizational changes in the context of a quality improvement program, and assess its impact on the delivery of best practices on maternal and newborn care around the time of childbirth in the Dominican Republic. The project will be conducted in collaboration with the National Center for Research on Maternal and Child Health of the Dominican Republic, and the Department of Maternal and Child Health of the Ministry of Public Health and Social Assistance of the Dominican Republic.

International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
Knowledge Sharing and Knowledge Translation


International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (ICDDR,B) is translating new and existing knowledge about maternal health into proposals for change in government policy and practice in Bangladesh. The ICDDR,B team is finalizing the knowledge translation curriculum which will be implemented with ICDDR,B researchers. These researchers will take the knowledge translation course, write their own knowledge translation brief and learn to enhance their communication with policy makers.

For an update on the project, read ICDDR,B's blog posts.

Jacaranda Health
A New Approach for Maternity Care


Jacaranda Health is an award-winning innovative business model for private-sector maternity care in peri-urban areas of East Africa. It has been designed by and for women of childbearing age living in poor urban areas in and around Nairobi. The MHTF is supporting a business model that successfully integrates evidence-based interventions into a sustainable fee-for-service model using dedicated mhealth applications for counseling, savings, and monitoring. Jacaranda Health's goal is to improve maternal and perinatal outcomes among the urban poor by increasing uptake of maternal health services, reducing costs, and dramatically improving the quality of care to which women have access. Through their recently launch mobile clinic, Jacaranda has begun seeing patients and is in the process of finding a suitable location and design for a fixed facility. Jacaranda has also been working with researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health to develop a rigorous evaluation of the model.

MaiMwana
Community Based Maternal Death Review


MaiMwana is piloting a project to strengthen the current Maternal Death Review system through a village-level program of maternal death audits. In each village of the program area, a verbal autopsy (structured interview) takes place with relatives and neighbors with¬in two weeks of every maternal death. Based on early data, MaiMwana expects to identify more maternal deaths than originally projected as it uncovers 'silent deaths.' The improved data allows for deeper analysis of maternal deaths in Malawi and will allow MaiMwana to make recommendations to the Ministry of Health for a national audit procedure.

For an update on the project, read MaiMwana's blog posts.

Medic Mobile
HealthChat, PatientView, and Medic Dashboard: Mobile Tools for Maternal Health


In late 2008, Medic Mobile recognized a demand for software, hardware, implementation strategies and impact analysis in mobile health. Their objective is to simplify technology, liberate talent, scale tools that work now, and embrace the trends of the future. By eliminating barriers to entry for these tools, Medic Mobile's aim is to create efficient, connected healthcare systems caring for healthier populations. The MHTF is funding Medic Mobile to create three mobile tools that will improve maternal healthcare. HealthChat is a SIM toolkit providing decision support and supply chain monitoring for community health workers and was recently shipped to the field for use. PatientView is a lightweight patient records system that includes patient flags and is currently being evaluated through randomized control trials in India and Ethiopia. Finally, Medic Dashboard is a web-based platform used to aggregate and visualize large quantities of data that has been successfully used even in settings with unreliable internet connections.

mothers2mothers
Using Cell Phones in PMTCT


mothers2mothers (m2m) strives to enhance the delivery and effectiveness of prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) services. However, client drop-off throughout the PMTCT care continuum undermines effective uptake of and adherence to key PMTCT and maternal and infant follow-up services. With support from the MHTF, m2m is exploring the concept of Active Client Follow-Up, an intervention designed to follow up m2m clients who have defaulted on key PMTCT services, encouraging them to return to, and remain in, care.

For an update on the project, read mothers2mothers' blog posts.

University of North Carolina
Systems for Evidence-based Guidance on Maternal and Perinatal Health


The MHTF supported a collaborative project between the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the World Health Organization. The project took the first steps in establishing a science-driven system for continuously updated guidance on evidence-based practices in maternal and perinatal health. The system included identifying gaps in evidence, generating research and funding for filling those gaps, and detailing the evidence to provide up-to-date recommendations. A "family" of researchers, practitioners, donors, and implementing agencies were assembled to participate in and oversee the process. Expert group meetings were held to develop a detailed strategy for creating and maintaining the new guidance system.

University of Oxford
Global Voices for Maternal Health


With support from the MHTF, researchers at the Nuffield Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology at Oxford University conducted an online 'crowd sourcing' exercise among nearly 1500 maternal health providers in developing countries to document barriers to implementing safe, effective, and affordable interventions. The researchers prepared and widely distributed a short paper summarizing the most effective interventions for the five most important causes of severe maternal morbidity and mortality (eclampsia/pre-eclampsia; post-partum hemorrhage; obstructed labor, unsafe abortion and sepsis.) The main barriers identified were: the inadequate availability, content and enforcement of clinical guidelines; inadequate pre-service and in-service training; lack of authorization for certain procedures; lack of specific resources; staff preference for less effective practices, as well as the cost of treatment for patients.

In their survey, the Oxford researchers confirmed the poor implementation rates of many interventions recommended for severe obstetric complications. Only 42% of key interventions were classified as having 'medium' or 'high' coverage. Across all regions, almost 50% of pregnant women attending birthing facilities may not have access to emergency interventions such as blood transfusions or to preventative measures such screening for preeclampsia or post-termination of pregnancy contraception. Other underutilized emergency procedures include assisted vaginal delivery and Caesarean section for prolonged/obstructed labour. In addition, there is an alarming pattern of poor coverage of many low-tech interventions, such as simple clean delivery practices, which are feasible even in the context of low-income settings.

As far as we are aware, this is the first time that crowdsourcing technology has been applied to health services research. Although the methodology has been widely used in the commercial and political sectors, and to some extent in academic research, its potential in clinical medicine and public health has yet to be fully explored. This study ccould mark the beginning of the permanent inclusion of direct healthcare providers in the decision-making process at all levels of the health service. The technology is already available for such direct participation. This strong message from the direct providers must be taken very seriously; without addressing the current 'disconnect' between decision makers and frontline healthcare staff, it is unlikely that further progress will be made.

For an update on the project, read Hannah Knight's blog post.

Partnership for Maternal Newborn and Child Health
Mapping of Knowledge Resources in Maternal Health


Under its three-year strategic framework, the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH) is building a state-of-the-art knowledge management system for the maternal-newborn-child health continuum, and the MHTF supported the mapping of knowledge resources for the maternal health component. Conducted by Management Sciences for Health (MSH), the comprehensive map was the result of extensive electronic searches, focus group analyses, email surveys, and individual interviews. MSH also provided recommendations on creating a knowledge management system that responds to the needs of relevant stakeholders. The Partnership and the MHTF will integrate this information into their respective management systems to ensure maximum value to users.

Population Action International
Integrating Maternal Health Supplies into the Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition


The MHTF is working with Population Action International (PAI) to apply the lessons learned from the reproductive health supplies movement to the maternal health field in order to ensure that women throughout the world have access to all the reproductive and maternal health supplies they need. PAI is facilitating the inclusion and engagement of maternal health groups as active members of the Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition (RHSC), promoting the adoption of maternal health supplies as a priority issue of the RHSC, and promoting the adoption of the supply issue into maternal health organizations' technical and advocacy priorities. Two critical outputs from this project are: 1) a report of two country case studies that highlight supplies needed beyond contraceptives, 2) a fact sheet, checklist, or toolkit on maternal health supplies that can be used with policy makers and partners.

PAI will also convene a group of key stakeholders from the maternal and reproductive health communities, as well as collaborate with the MHTF to create and maintain a Community of Practice webpage devoted to maternal health supplies. PAI will then facilitate draft recommendations to increase access to maternal health supplies, with an eye toward leveraging national, regional and global level commitments to reduce maternal mortality. For more information, please visit the Community of Practice on maternal health supplies.

Click here for Roy Jacobstein's blog post that presents his observations on the "Linking Reproductive and Maternal Health Supplies" meeting at PAI held in December 2009.

Click here to read the report of Maternal Health Supplies in Uganda and Bangladesh.

Public Health Foundation of India
Quality Roadmap for Institutional Births in India


Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) has recognized that poor quality of care may act as an obstacle to women considering institutional births. In order to address quality of care issues, PHFI is producing a roadmap for improving quality of care at delivery. This roadmap consists of a Quality Assessment Package, which includes a "menu" of options for interventions, as well as a decision guide to assist policy makers in their choice of interventions. Through this initiative supported by the MHTF, PHFI hopes to embed quality improvement interventions at the facility level throughout the Indian health system. A list of indicators for the roadmap has been developed and translated into Hindi for piloting in two districts in Uttar Pradesh to determine its feasibility, usefulness and acceptability as a tool for health care workers.

Rajarata University Department of Community Medicine
Measuring Economic Impact of Maternal Morbidity


The Department of Community Medicine at Rajarata University is working to improve available data on maternal death and morbidity through an adapted IMMPACT toolkit productivity questionnaire that will be field tested in Sri Lanka. To date, the team has collected data on the prevalence of post-partum depression in two-thirds of Sri Lanka's districts while, at the same time, training field teams of medical students in data collections methods.

For an update on the project, read the Department of Community Medicine's blog posts.

Research Triangle Institute

(in collaboration with the Global Alliance for the Prevention of Prematurity and Stillbirth, Global Network for Women's and Children's Health, Harvard School of Public Health, and the MHTF)
Pilot Study of an Indicator to Measure Intrapartum Stillbirth and Immediate Neonatal Death


The Intrapartum Stillbirth and Early Neonatal Death Indicator (ISINDI) is intended to monitor improvements in the quality of obstetric and newborn care provided at birth by skilled attendants in health facilities. As it is currently defined, ISINDI is constructed with (1) a numerator comprising the sum of intrapartum stillbirths (with fetal heart beats perceived at admission in labor ward) and very early newborn death (within the first 24 hours of life) (all above 2,500 grams) in a given facility in a given year; and (2) a denominator comprising all births (above 2,500 grams) in the same facility. The objectives of this pilot study in 4-5 hospitals are: 1) to develop and evaluate a practical and feasible method for prospective, standardized measurement of intrapartum stillbirth and immediate neonatal death rates at health facilities performing deliveries on a routine basis; 2) to refine the indicator by analyzing its components; 3) to assess the potential cost (both human and financial) and acceptability of monitoring the indicator routinely.

Stanton-Hill Research and Harvard Medical School
Validating Women's Self Reports of Indications for Caesarean Delivery


Currently, cesarean delivery is the only surgery for which we have nearly global population-based data. This is thanks primarily to the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and UNICEF's Multiple Indicator Clusters Survey (MICS). However, few surveys of reproductive aged women in low income countries have incorporated questions related to cesarean that go beyond mode of delivery. Given that routine health information will not be sufficiently available for years into the future, it is likely that large-scale surveys will continue to be conducted and may be able to provide an invaluable source of valid information on cesarean delivery. This study aims to validate self-reported data on the classification of cesarean deliveries among women delivering in Korle Bu Teaching Hospital in Ghana and Altagracia Maternity Hospital in the Dominican Republic, using two different approaches.

White Ribbon Alliance
The Maternal Mortality Campaign


The White Ribbon Alliance's Global Patron, Sarah Brown, founded a global Maternal Mortality Campaign with the support of a wide range of actors within the maternal health community. With general support from the MHTF and others, the Maternal Mortality Campaign aims to establish and deliver an advocacy initiative that will contribute to significantly increasing funding for maternal and newborn health and mortality, by involving powerful advocacy voices not traditionally associated with maternal heath and new, influential supporters. Developing country advocates and their campaigns will be engaged with their international counterparts and a unified global campaign will influence policy and funding decisions made at key gatherings of the G20, European Union, African Union, and United Nations.

Women Deliver
Mapping Maternal Health Organizations in Six Priority Countries


By tapping their network of over 8000 members and stakeholders, Women Deliver has mapped nearly 1,500 organizations working on maternal health in a number of priority countries, including India, Brazil, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Ghana, and Indonesia. The interactive map resides on the MHTF website where users are able to provide more details about each organization, add new organizations, and download existing information for a variety of uses. The MHTF has expanded this mapping exercise to cover the 68 high-burden countries identified by Countdown to 2015 so that users and observers can easily learn who is working on various aspects of maternal health, where they are located, and where there are gaps in maternal health services.

To learn more about the project and Women Deliver, read updates on the MHTF blog.

Women's Refugee Commission
Promoting the Minimum Initial Services Package for Reproductive Health in Disaster Risk Reduction


With the documented increase in natural disasters as a result of climate change, international policy makers have turned their attention to creating disaster risk reduction and emergency preparedness policies. However, interventions in post-disaster relief efforts notoriously neglect women's reproductive health. With funding from the MHTF, the Women's Refugee Commission (WRC) has advocated for global policies on disaster risk reduction that include maternal and reproductive healthcare and worked at the country-level with government ministries and first responders to design disaster risk reduction plans that include activities known to reduce maternal mortality and promote access and quality reproductive healthcare. Using their expert Minimum Initial Services Package for Reproductive Health in Disaster Risk Reduction, the WRC has met with and provided technical assistance to key global and regional disaster risk reduction and natural disaster policy-making bodies, focusing their technical assistance and training efforts in northern Uganda and southern Sudan where the needs are greatest and where the WRC has already established relationships with country officials.

As a founding member, the WRC will coordinate the International Secretariat of Disaster Reduction Reproductive Health sub-working Group; and collaborate to develop and promote global policy and guidance on reproductive health and disaster risk reduction and emergency preparedness. The WRC will also develop monitoring and evaluation criteria on incorporating reproductive health into health mitigation and preparedness activities, while also publishing a report containing lessons learned and best practices on reproductive health in emergency preparedness efforts in South Sudan, Uganda, Haiti, the Philippines and Indonesia.

Woodrow Wilson International Center
The Maternal Health Dialogue Series


The MHTF, in partnership with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and technical assistance from USAID, supports the Maternal Health Dialogue Series at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (WWIC) in Washington, DC. The series covers a range of emerging and neglected maternal health issues, with a strategic focus on links to other development sectors such as transportation, gender equity, religion and poverty. Tapping expertise from around the world, especially from experts working in developing countries, the monthly series is webcast live.

Audiences at the Wilson Center dialogues comprise senior-level policy makers and civil servants from the US Government and from foreign consuls and missions located in Washington DC, as well as educational institutions from around the world. A pilot partnership with the African Population and Health Research Center simulcasts parallel dialogues for jointly convened audiences in Nairobi, Kenya and Washington, DC.

Below are the lists of upcoming and past programs. Dates and times of future programs are dependent on the availability and confirmation of presenters. Check the WWIC and MHTF websites often for updates and announcements on confirmed event dates. We anticipate that these announcements will post only a few weeks in advance of each program.




A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z