An Assessment of the Coverage, Boosters and Barriers of the Out-patient Therapeutic Care for Severe Acute Malnutrition in Albay Province, Philippines


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Date
2021
Authors
Calleja, Arlene P.
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Abstract
Background: Severe acute malnutrition prevents a child from developing normally and increases mortality risk. It remains to be a major global health problem in children under 5 years of age. The community-based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM) is a nutrition intervention aimed at the early diagnosis and management of these children at the community level through the provision of therapeutic foods coupled with facility-based management for those with medical complications. In 2015, the Philippine Integrated Management of Acute Malnutrition (PIMAM) program was established to manage acute malnutrition in Filipino children of less than 5 years of age. Evaluating coverage which is one of the important indicators of CMAM program performance as well as identifying its boosters and barriers were imperative. The study aimed to assess the coverage, boosters, and barriers of the PIMAM Out-patient Therapeutic Care (OTC) in the province of Albay, Philippines. Methods: This is a mixed method explanatory sequential research design adopting the Semi-Quantitative Evaluation of Access and Coverage (SQUEAC) tool. Accrual period was from January 2019 to present. Collection and analysis of quantitative routine program data from all the cities and municipalities of Albay followed by qualitative data collection through community assessment, key-informant interviews, informal group discussions and directly observing OTC processes were done. A small area survey to validate hypotheses regarding areas with high or low coverage was subsequently conducted. Results: Analyses of secondary routine program data showed that only two out of the 18 cities and municipalities in Albay had complete program data where Municipality C had high coverage and Municipality K had low coverage in 2019. Qualitative methods identified the main boosters to program coverage which include (1) support from the Local Government Unit and the Municipal Health Officer; (2) presence of a well-trained OTC personnel; (3) OTC services are made available at the barangay level; (4) provision of door- to-door screening, follow-up and dispensing of nutrition commodity; (5) community health workers’ willingness to learn and be trained; (6) supervision of the community health workers by the OTC personnel; (7) presence of community mobilization practices; (8) support of the barangay council; (9) acute malnutrition is not stigmatized; and (10) caregivers’ awareness and acceptance of the PIMAM program. Barriers on the other hand appeared to be more significant which include (1) limited budget from the Local Government Unit; (2) Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF) stockouts; (3) inadequate number of trained OTC personnel; (4) gaps in anthropometric measurements; (5) insufficient community mobilization; (6) community health workers’ lack of knowledge and training on PIMAM; (7) community’s lack of knowledge on malnutrition and the PIMAM; (8) caregivers’ laziness and indifference on their child’s condition; (9) RUTF feeding difficulties; and (10) COVID-19 pandemic stopped community mobilization and OTC admissions. The small area survey results showed low coverage in both near and far barangays in Municipality C. Conclusions and Recommendations: The study was able to present the level of PIMAM implementation in the different municipalities in Albay and was able to evaluate program data completeness and accuracy. Boosters can be considered as groundworks where opportunities to strengthen program access coverage rest. Barriers which validate coverage failure shall be addressed such that bridging gaps and augmenting inadequacies, together with adaptations to program protocols must be prioritized for an effective program implementation. The unavailability of RUTF and the COVID-19 pandemic could have explained the low coverage in both near and far barangays in Municipality C in the small area survey. The study therefore recommends the following: (1) provide measures to improve program data quality; (2) strengthen ownership of the PIMAM program by the Local Government Unit; (3) increase the number of PIMAM-trained personnel; (4) intensify OTC services at the barangay level together with the training of the community health workers on PIMAM; (5) increase the number and quality of community mobilization activities; (6) address shortage of RUTF; (7) consider program adaptations to PIMAM implementation during the COVID-19 pandemic; and (8) more research on the evaluation of the PIMAM in other regions of the country.
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Keywords: Severe Acute Malnutrition, Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition, Out-patient Therapeutic Care, program evaluation, access and coverage, boosters and barriers.
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10.5281/zenodo.6976073