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Transitions
Volume 14, No. 3,
April 2002
This Transitions is
also available in [PDF] format.
ReproSalud:
Nationwide Community Participation in Peru
By
Cecilia Moya, Clearinghouse Program Associate, International Division,
Advocates for Youth
In 1995, two Peruvian
non-governmental organizations, Movimiento Manuela Ramos and Centro
de Investigación y Educación Popular Alternativa,
began an innovative, five-year project on reproductive health and rights.1,2 The
project, ReproSalud, focused on social barriers to women's
access to reproductive health services, including limited power to
negotiate within sexual relationships, social isolation, domestic violence,
lack of cash, and low self-esteem. It targeted the poorest, hardest-to-reach,
Peruvian women, ages 15 to 49, many of whom begin childbearing by age
15 and live in urban and rural areas where health care services are
underused. RepoSalud was based on an assumption that, in a
more gender equitable setting, women would be more aware of their sexual
and reproductive rights and more likely to demand and use quality health
care services. Thus, ReproSalud aimed to improve women's sexual
and reproductive health through individual and community empowerment,
using participatory methods to make community education and mobilization
the backbone of its efforts.
ReproSalud partnered
with women's community-based organizations (CBOs) in eight of Peru's
24 departments. By December 2000, ReproSalud established
partnerships with 240 CBOs in the Andean highlands and Amazon basin,
which, in turn, worked with 2,300 neighboring CBOs. More than 90,000
women and 50,000 men participated in the education and training
activities. ReproSalud and each partner CBO conducted
a self-diagnostic workshop, allowing participants to explore their
perceptions, attitudes, and experiences regarding sexual and reproductive
health, community gender norms, and available health services.
Workshop participants identified the priority reproductive health
concerns on which they wanted to take action. Concerns included
reproductive tract infections, "too many children," childbirth
complications, abortion, teenage pregnancy, domestic violence,
and inadequate treatment at health centers.
ReproSalud helped
each CBO design and implement a strategy to address the primary
reproductive health problem identified in its community, primarily
through training a team of health promoters to teach other community
members about sexual and reproductive health, emphasizing the selected
priority concern. Because women voiced a strong interest in involving
their husbands, ReproSalud also trained men as health
promoters for other men. Involving men helped address important
issues, such as alcoholism, violence, forced sex, and communication
between partners. The interventions laid the foundation for advocacy
by health promoters. In many communities, the health promoters
influenced the attitudes of local health care providers and public
health authorities.*
Key challenges for ReproSalud include:
- Expanding
the base of beneficiaries at a low cost without losing
innovative elements
- Conducting
an impact evaluation
- Anticipating
expenses related to community participation
- Allowing
adequate time for training and community mobilization.
Surveys demonstrate
significant improvements in reproductive health knowledge and service
utilization. Evaluations show dramatic decreases in alcohol consumption,
domestic violence, and forced sex and large improvements in contraceptive
knowledge and attitudes. Evaluation is incomplete regarding behavior
change; yet, interim results support this holistic model and demonstrate
the inherent strength of the strategy of community participation.
References:
- Coe AB. Health,
Rights and Realities: An Analysis of the ReproSalud
Project in Peru. Takoma Park, MD: Center for Health
and Gender Equity, 2001.
- Rogow D. Alone
You Are Nobody, Together We Float: The Manuela Ramos
Movement. [Quality/Calidad/Qualité, no.10]
New York, NY: Population Council, 2000.
* In
2001, ReproSalud received a grant to continue working for
five more years. Based on ongoing assessment and evaluation, ReproSalud will
focus on the Andean highlands and on advocacy, linking
community-based advocacy groups to form wider networks.
Transitions (ISSN 1097-1254) © 2002, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping young people make safe and responsible decisions about sex. For permission to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420.
Editor: Sue Alford
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