SELF-CARE IN SENEGAL
Background
After the World Health Organization (WHO) released the first self-care guidelines for sexual and reproductive health and rights in 2019, a global advocacy movement emerged to ensure that countries advance policies and programs that supported self-care practices. Self-care is the ability of individuals, families, and communities to promote health, prevent disease, maintain health, and cope with illness and disability with or without the support of a health-care provider. PSI, as the incubator of the Self-Care Trailblazer Group (SCTG) Secretariat, is supporting the creation and growth of national self-care networks (NSNs) in at least five countries between January 2021–December 2023 to scale up self-care policies and programs in order to transform health care systems and place autonomy, power, and control in the hands of women and girls. In doing so, the SCTG can accelerate progress towards universal health coverage (UHC), as quality self-care increases individual, family, and community access to appropriate products, services, and information. Senegal’s government has long demonstrated leadership in advancing contraceptive self-injection, as well as UHC. As part of this global advocacy movement for self-care, Senegal started an awareness-raising campaign in 2020, at the same time that the COVID-19 pandemic began. This was an opportunity to advance self-care through policies and programming in alignment with UHC efforts.
Objectives of the Senegal Self-Care Pioneers Group
The Senegal Self-Care Pioneers Group includes ministry representatives, non-governmental organizations, and civil society organizations. The group established a national advocacy goal for self-care by identifying the entry points and policy changes essential to advancing self-care at the national level. Following a policy landscape analysis and stakeholder mapping, the Self-Care Pioneers Group began work in 2020 to adapt and adopt the recommendations of the WHO’s 2022 revised guideline on self-care interventions for health and well-being and develop a corresponding advocacy plan.
Thus, under the leadership of the Ministry of Health, the group developed a national guide to support implementation. Today it continues to provide advocacy and technical support to advance self-care in Senegal.
KEY PRIORITIES
The peer-assist discussion focused specifically on issues related to funding a self-care program, implementing a pilot phase, and developing and using effective programmatic tools and techniques. The Senegal team asked the following questions to the Nigeria team:
- Financing a self-care program:
- How can domestic and international resources be mobilized to fund self-care programs?
- What funding mechanisms exist?
- Implementing a self-care program in a pilot phase:
- Can you share your experience in implementing a self-care program? What was the process like, and what are the precautions to take?
- The role of a Pioneers group in developing implementation tools and strategies (training materials, monitoring and evaluation documents, etc.):
- What role can the national self-care network play in developing strategic documents for implementation?
- What are the success factors for Nigeria’s self-care network?
- How do you keep your members engaged?
RECOMMENDATIONS FROM THE NIGERIA TEAM
The Nigeria team shared the following recommendations based on their experiences:
- Creating a national training document and having master trainers available at each district or region will aid scale-up and ensure capacity building at the regional level.
- There are several self-care products available, and the approach for demand creation should be tailored to meet each target archetype.
- The private sector should be involved in the design of approaches to ensure sustainability mechanisms are fully in place.
- Current learning shows that e-commerce and online channels will play a key role in the availability of affordable self-care for the younger population.
- Policymakers should review existing policies on who manages certain medications within the health system. A key example of a policy required from the outset is one governing task-shifting and task-sharing, especially if there is a shortage in human resources for health.
- Simplified regulatory processes should be in place to ensure easy control and registration of self-care products.
TAKEAWAYS
- Funding is a critical challenge to address.
- Advocacy for in-country funding should be a priority to ensure continuing the self-care momentum.
- The Self-Care Pioneers Group has a key role to play in providing technical advice for implementation partners.
- Leveraging successful experiences and research and evidence on self-care is a powerful way to strengthen advocacy, stakeholder engagement, and advance self-care adoption.
WHERE ARE WE NOW?
The Senegal Self-Care Pioneers Group found the peer assist exchange to be a really positive experience. Since that discussion, the group has been able to reflect on its positioning and understanding that while the group itself does not currently have sufficient funds to implement a pilot program, member organizations can do so. The group will also be able to leverage its experiences. There is coordination with the Ministry of Health to ensure that each intervention addresses the self-care framework developed by the Pioneers group.
Senegal’s Ministry of Health representative remarked, “We plan on continuing the awareness-raising program on self-care, using local language, and expanding the program to reach all people in the community.”
To learn more about peer assists or implement one yourself, email West Africa Region Knowledge Management Officer Aissatou Thioye (athioye@fhi360.org) and sign up for Knowledge SUCCESS updates for the latest trending FP/RH news.
Download the guide on how to conduct a self-care peer assist.