FRONTIERS PROJECT
Institutionalizing a Successful Adolescent Reproductive Health and HIV Intervention Program: Expanding the Kenya Adolescent Reproductive Health Program Experience in Kenya

This project identified selected activities from the Kenya Adolescent Reproductive Health Program (see "Global Agenda: Improving the Reproductive Health of Youth in Kenya") and institutionalized these activities within the study sites. The Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH), in collaboration with FRONTIERS, provided technical training to enable staff from the participating ministries to sustain the intervention in the experimental locations and introduce it in two former control sites.

Given the success of the pilot intervention and the interest by the community and the ministries to incorporate the programs into routine operations, a follow-on project was initiated from April 2003 to April 2005. This project facilitated the "adopting and institutionalizing" of the reproductive health and HIV/AIDS activities at the district level throughout Western Province and created conditions for the replication in additional provinces. During the follow-on "institutionalization" period, more than 1,100 personnel were trained among the three ministries as implementers of the project's activities, including peer educators, heads of schools, guidance and counseling teachers, public health technicians, and religious community leaders. From May 2005 to April 2006, with additional support from USAID/Kenya, the project was expanded throughout eight additional districts in Western Province. During this time, sustainable mechanisms were created to facilitate inter-ministerial cooperation at the province, district, and division levels. The scale-up project reached 177,945 people throughout the province and trained an additional 1,951 personnel.

From May 2006 to May 2007, the intervention was "replicated" in two additional provinces, Eastern and Nyanza, in preparation for expansion to the remaining districts in years to come. To support the interventions, FRONTIERS provided guidance and support to two districts of Eastern Province, while PATH is taking the lead in two districts of Nyanza Province. Staff from both organizations collaborated at the national level to assist the three ministries in incorporating the components into their standard protocols and policies. To date, the project has trained 641 ministry personnel in both provinces as implementers.


Location

Kenya

Duration

September 2003–May 2008

Population Council researcher

Ian Askew

Non-Council collaborator

Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH)

Donor

US Agency for International Development

Publications/Resources


Related Project

See Also



Print this page

@
E-mail this page

This page updated
31 January 2008


   

What's New

To receive FRONTIERS announcements by e-mail, sign up here.
 

Publications/Resources

“Mainstreaming and scaling up the Kenya Adolescent Reproductive Health Project” (2007) (PDF, 229 KB)

"Kenya: Multisectoral engagement increases support for youth RH" (2007)(full text)

"Tuko Pamoja: Adolescent reproductive health and life skills curriculum" (2006) (PDF, 1.17 MB)

More