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How a co-design process led to more contextually relevant family planning interventions in emerging urban settings in Eastern Uganda

Authors :
Ssanyu, Jacquellyn Nambi
Kananura, Rornald Muhumuza
Birabwa, Catherine
Kizito, Felix
Namutamba, Sarah
Akongo, Dorothy
Namara, Elizabeth
Kyangwa, Moses
Kaula, Henry
Nakimuli, Doreen
Magunda, Andrew
Kakaire, Othman
Waiswa, Peter
Ssanyu, Jacquellyn Nambi
Kananura, Rornald Muhumuza
Birabwa, Catherine
Kizito, Felix
Namutamba, Sarah
Akongo, Dorothy
Namara, Elizabeth
Kyangwa, Moses
Kaula, Henry
Nakimuli, Doreen
Magunda, Andrew
Kakaire, Othman
Waiswa, Peter
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Voluntary, rights-based family planning upholds women’s right to determine freely the number and spacing of their children. However, low-resource settings like Uganda still face a high unmet need for family planning. And, while urban areas are often indicated to have better access to health services, emerging evidence is revealing intra-urban socio-economic differentials in family planning utilization. To address the barriers to contraceptive use in these settings, understanding community-specific challenges and involving them in tailored intervention design is crucial. This paper describes the use of co-design, a human-centred design tool, to develop context-specific interventions that promote voluntary family planning in urban settings in Eastern Uganda. A five-stage co-design approach was used: 1) Empathize: primary data was collected to understand the problem and people involved, 2) Define: findings were shared with 56 participants in a three-day in-person co-design workshop, including community members, family planning service providers and leaders, 3) Ideate: workshop participants generated potential solutions, 4) Prototype: participants prioritized prototypes, and 5) Testing: user feedback was sought about the prototypes. A package of ten interventions was developed. Five interventions targeted demand-side barriers to family planning uptake, four targeted supply-side barriers, and one addressed leadership and governance barriers. Involving a diverse group of co-creators provided varied experiences and expertise to develop the interventions. Participants expressed satisfaction with their involvement in finding solutions to challenges in their communities. However, power imbalances and language barriers were identified by the participants as potential barriers to positive group dynamics and discussion quality. To address them, participants were separated into groups, and medical terminologies were simplified during brainstorming sessions. These changes improved

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1416049078
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371.journal.pgph.0002421