{"doc_desc":{"title":"In Their Hands","idno":"APHRC-ITH-2021-1.2","producers":[{"name":"African Population and Health Research Center","abbreviation":"APHRC","affiliation":"","role":" Documentation of the study"}],"prod_date":"2021-12-21","version_statement":{"version":"1.2"}},"study_desc":{"title_statement":{"idno":"APHRC-ITH-2021-1.2","title":"External Evaluation of the In Their Hands Programme - Kenya.","sub_title":"Round 3","alt_title":"ITH"},"authoring_entity":[{"name":"Yohannes Dibaba Wado, PhD","affiliation":"African Population and Health Research Centre"},{"name":"Damazo Kadengye, PhD","affiliation":"African Population and Health Research Centre"}],"oth_id":[{"name":"Homabay residents","affiliation":"","email":"","role":"Study participants"},{"name":"Community leaders - chiefs and village elders","affiliation":"","email":"","role":"Support to field teams"},{"name":"Field team-data collectors, team managers and supervisors","affiliation":"","email":"","role":"Ensuring high quality data is collected."},{"name":"Consultant data analyst","affiliation":"","email":"","role":"Supporting data analysis"}],"production_statement":{"producers":[{"name":"Estelle M. Sidze, PhD","affiliation":"African Population and Health Research Centre","role":"Associate Research Scientist"},{"name":"Tizta Tilahun, PhD","affiliation":"African Population and Health Research Centre","role":"Post-doctoral Research Scientist"},{"name":"Joan Njagi, MSC","affiliation":"African Population and Health Research Centre","role":"Research Officer"},{"name":"Clement Oduor, M.A","affiliation":"African Population and Health Research Centre","role":"Research Officer"}],"copyright":"\u00a9APHRC,2021","funding_agencies":[{"name":"Child Investment Fund Foundation","abbreviation":"CIFF","role":"Funder"}],"grant_no":"R-1710-02085"},"series_statement":{"series_info":"External Evaluation of the In Their Hands Programme -Kenya,Round 1(ITH) is the third  round of ITH survey."},"version_statement":{"version_date":"2021-12-21","version_notes":"N\/A"},"study_info":{"keywords":[{"keyword":"according to the WHO, adolescents refers to any person between the ages of 10 and 19 years. This study focuses on adolescents of age 15-19 years only.","vocab":"Adolescents:","uri":""},{"keyword":"is measured by examining adolescent involvement in different aspects of the project. In the literature on adolescent SRH, adolescent voice is defined through the following elements: space, expression, audience and influence","vocab":"Adolescent voice ","uri":""},{"keyword":"is measured by gathering adolescent views on decisions about the future (future goals), decision about having children \u2013 if and when, decisions about sex and decisions about contraceptives","vocab":"Decision making autonomy ","uri":""},{"keyword":"is examined by interrogating the extent to which the adolescent \u2013 provider relationship is influenced by age related power differences i.e. adult \u2013 adolescent, position and the effect of such power dynamics on adolescent\u2019s choice of contraceptives.","vocab":"Power dynamics ","uri":""},{"keyword":"is defined as the extent to which health services provided to adolescents improve desired health outcomes among adolescents. We focus on users experience, availability, accessibility, affordability, appropriateness and acceptability of services.","vocab":"Quality of care ","uri":""}],"abstract":"Abstract\n\nBackground:\nAdolescent girls in Kenya are disproportionately affected by early and unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortion and HIV infection. The In Their Hands (ITH) programme in Kenya aims to increase adolescents' use of high-quality sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services through targeted interventions.  ITH Programme aims to promote use of contraception and testing for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) including HIV or pregnancy, for sexually active adolescent girls, 2) provide information, products and services on the adolescent girl's terms; and 3) promote communities support for girls and boys to access SRH services.\n\nObjectives:\nThe objectives of the evaluation are to assess: a) to what extent and how the new Adolescent Reproductive Health (ARH) partnership model and integrated system of delivery is working to meet its intended objectives and the needs of adolescents; b)  adolescent user experiences across key quality dimensions and outcomes; c)  how  ITH programme has influenced adolescent voice, decision-making autonomy, power dynamics and provider accountability; d) how community support for adolescent reproductive and sexual health initiatives has changed as a result of this programme. \n\nMethodology\nITH programme is being implemented in two phases, a formative planning and experimentation in the first year from April 2017 to March 2018, and a national roll out and implementation from April 2018 to March 2020. This second phase is informed by an Annual Programme Review and thorough benchmarking and assessment which informed critical changes to performance and capacity so that ITH is fit for scale. It is expected that ITH will cover approximately 250,000 adolescent girls aged 15-19 in Kenya by April 2020.  The programme is implemented by a consortium of Marie Stopes Kenya (MSK), Well Told Story, and Triggerise. ITH's key implementation strategies seek to increase adolescent motivation for service use, create a user-defined ecosystem and platform to provide girls with a network of accessible subsidized and discreet SRH services; and launch and sustain a national discourse campaign around adolescent sexuality and rights. The 3-year study will employ a mixed-methods approach with multiple data sources including secondary data, and qualitative and quantitative primary data with various stakeholders to explore their perceptions and attitudes towards adolescents SRH services. Quantitative data analysis will be done using STATA to provide descriptive statistics and statistical associations \/ correlations on key variables. All qualitative data will be analyzed using NVIVO software. \n\nStudy Duration: \n36 months - between 2018 and 2020.","coll_dates":[{"start":"2020-03-12","end":"2020-03-21","cycle":"Round 3-Before temporary suspension of data collection due to COVID-19"},{"start":"2020-08-25","end":"2020-10-16","cycle":"Round 3-Resumption of data collection after being suspended in March due to COVID-19"}],"nation":[{"name":"Kenya","abbreviation":"KEN"}],"geog_coverage":"Homabay county","analysis_unit":"Households","universe":"Adolescent girls aged 15-19 years,  parents and the community health volunteers","notes":"To assess if and how the In Their Hands (ITH) partnership model and integrated system of delivery meets its intended objectives and the needs of adolescents, promotes adolescent voice, decision-making autonomy, power dynamics and community support for adolescent sexual and reproductive health.","study_scope":"To assess if and how the In Their Hands (ITH) partnership model and integrated system of delivery meets its intended objectives and the needs of adolescents, promotes adolescent voice, decision-making autonomy, power dynamics and community support for adolescent sexual and reproductive health."},"method":{"data_collection":{"sampling_procedure":"Quantitative Sampling\n\nWe estimated a sample size of 1,918 to detect a five percentage-point difference in the use of long term methods between baseline and endline time points at 80% power.As baseline, 23% of the adolescent girls reported that they were using long term methods in Homa Bay county. We sampled three sub counties\u2014Ndhiwa, Homa Bay town and Kasipul for the endline survey. However, as fieldwork was interrupted due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we added one sub county\u2014Karachuonyo sub county\u2014when data collection resumed in September 2020. Sub counties and wards were purposively selected from sub counties that had been prioritized for the ITH program based on availability of ITH affiliated health facilities. The purposive selection of sub counties based on presence of ITH intervention affiliated health\nfacilities meant that urban and peri-urban areas were oversampled due to the concentration of the health facilities in urban\/peri-urban areas. In each ward, eight villages that formed the immediate catchment area for each ITH program affiliated health facilities were then selected for the study. We conducted a household listing of all households in each sampled village to identify households with an adolescent girl who met the study's inclusion criteria. Households were then randomly sampled from the list of households with eligible adolescents of age 15-19 years. To be eligible, an adolescent girl had to be aged 15-19 years, resident in the study area for at least six months preceding the study. Accordingly, students who stayed in boarding schools away from their parents were excluded from the study.\n\n\n\nQualitative Sampling\n\nThe qualitative component involved in-depth interviews (IDIs) with adolescent girls ages 15-19 years and focus group discussions (FGDs) with parents\/adults and CHVs. We conducted IDIs with adolescent girls who had enrolled in the program but dropped out for various reasons, as well as girls who were enrolled and still using t-safe services. In addition, we conducted FGDs with CHVs and parents\/adult caretakers of adolescents aged 15-19 years from the program areas. Participants were purposively selected from the villages included in the evaluation study. For the endline study, we conducted 17 IDIs with adolescents who had been enrolled in the ITH program and were receiving services or had dropped from the program. We also conducted two FGDs with CHVs and four FGDs with parents\/adultcaretakers of adolescents aged 15-19 years.","sampling_deviation":"N\/A","coll_mode":"Face-to-face [f2f] for quantitative data collection and Focus Group Discussions and In Depth Interviews for qualitative data collection","research_instrument":"An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to collect data from adolescent girls. The questionnaire included questions on socio-demographic and household characteristics; SRH knowledge and sources of information; sexual activity and relationships; contraceptive knowledge, access, choice and use; and exposure to family planning messages and contraceptive decision making. To assess adolescents\u2019 exposure to the t-safe program we included a series of questions drawn from similar project evaluation surveys as well as t-safe project program monitoring indicators. The questions assessed whether adolescents had ever heard the t-safe program, whether they have ever been contacted by mobilizers,\nwhether they participated in any community event organized by the t-safe mobilizers, whether they received information about SRH through t-safe affiliated organizations Facebook or website, and whether they received SMS or WhatsApp messages focused on SRH from tsafe. For those who responded positively, the survey asked further questions on the sources; from which site on internet or Facebook\u2019 or \u2018which person or organization sent you these messages\u2019 and \u2018how many times have you received information\u2019. Adolescents were also asked whether they had ever registered to a t-safe or Triggerise platform using a mobile\nphone after discussing with a mobilizer, after discussing with their peers or family members or by themselves after hearing from some other places.\nThe questionnaire was developed in English and then translated into Kiswahili. Data were collected on android tablets programmed using the Open Data Kit (ODK)-based SurveyCTO\nplatform.\n\nFor the qualitative component ;Semi-structured interview guides were developed by experienced researchers in consultation with the program partners for the qualitative interviews (with adolescent girls) and FGDs (with parents\/adult caretakers of adolescents and CHVs). The guides included probes to explore  adolescents' exposure to the ITH program; their experiences with program's SRH services; their perceptions on quality of services; as well as challenges and barriers to access of SRH services. The guides also included probes on the community\u2019s \"support\" for adolescents' sexual and reproductive health services and; their perspectives on the effects of the program.\nThe guides were developed in English and then translated into Kiswahili for data collection. The guides were pre-tested during the pilot study.","act_min":"To ensure high quality data was collected, data quality control activities conducted  included; i) review of each questionnaire by the field interviewers before leaving the household to be sure that every applicable question had been asked and that responses recorded were clear and reasonable; ii) spot checks by team leaders to verify that the interviewers asked questions correctly and visited the right households; iii) review of all completed interviews by the team leaders to ensure internal consistency and completeness; iv) daily debriefs between the field team and the studymanagement team to clarify data collection issues and concerns from the previous day's work; v) in-built internal consistency checks embedded in the SurveyCTO platform, which triggered error messages and caution notices whenever implausible data were entered;inconsistency check reports based on pre-designed data quality check scripts generated by the data manager and shared with the data collectors for validation and correction as was\nnecessary; vii) listening to a sample of completed qualitative interviews to verify consistency with the interview guides and; viii) validation of transcripts against the audio files to ensure consistency and completeness.","weight":"N\/A","cleaning_operations":"Quantitative data was collected on android tablets programmed using the Open Data Kit (ODK)-based SurveyCTO platform while qualitative data was collected using a recorder.Once quantitative data were confirmed to be complete, the data was approved for synchronization. Data were electronically transmitted to a secure password protected SurveyCTO server at the APHRC office. Backup versions of the data remained in the encrypted and password-protected tablets until the end of field activities when all the data were considered to have been synchronized. Subsequently, tablet was securely and permanently cleaned. Data on the server were retrieved by the data manager and then downloaded for use. For qualitative data, audio recordings from qualitative interviews were transcribed and saved in MS Word format. The transcripts were stored electronically in password protected computers and were only accessible to the evaluation team working on the project."},"analysis_info":{"response_rate":"N\/A","sampling_error_estimates":"N\/A"}},"data_access":{"dataset_use":{"contact":[{"name":"Director of research","affiliation":"APHRC","email":"info@aphrc.org","uri":"www.aphrc.org"}],"cit_req":"Use of the dataset must be acknowledged using a citation which would include:\n- the Identification of the Primary Investigator\n- the title of the survey (including country, acronym and year of implementation)\n- the survey reference number\n- the source and date of download","conditions":"N\/A","disclaimer":"The user of the data acknowleges that the original collector of the data,the authorized distributor of the data and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses"}}}}