BMC Health Services Research (Oct 2021)

Assessment of segmentation and targeted counseling on family planning quality of care and client satisfaction: a facility-based survey of clients in Niger

  • Ilene S. Speizer,
  • Hachimou Amani,
  • Jennifer Winston,
  • Souleymane Amadou Garba,
  • Amelia Maytan-Joneydi,
  • Illiassou Chaibou Halidou,
  • Lisa M. Calhoun,
  • Abdoul Moumouni Nouhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-07066-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Background Niger demonstrates high fertility and low contraceptive use that are typical in much of the West and Central African region. The government of Niger has committed to increasing modern contraceptive use as part of its health strategy. Designing and testing strategies to improve quality of care and satisfaction of family planning clients is important for addressing low contraceptive use in contexts like Niger. Methods This study uses recently collected client exit interview data from 2720 clients surveyed in the Dosso region of Niger to examine whether implementation of segmentation-based counseling leads to improved quality of services and client satisfaction. We compare three scenarios: a) facilities where segmentation counseling was implemented since 2017; b) facilities where segmentation counseling began in late 2019; and c) facilities without segmentation counseling. Bivariate and multivariate analyses are undertaken to determine if there are differences in quality of services and client satisfaction between the facility groups and between clients that were segmented and those who were not segmented in the first two scenarios. Results Results demonstrate that clients in facilities with segmentation generally received better quality services than clients in facilities without segmentation. Clients in facilities implementing segmentation longer reported higher quality services than the recent segmentation facilities. Clients who were segmented compared to those who were not segmented also reported better quality services. New clients reported higher quality services than returning clients and among new clients, those who were segmented also reported higher quality services. No differences were found in client satisfaction between facility scenarios or between segmented and non-segmented clients. Conclusions These findings demonstrate that segmentation or another targeted counseling strategy could be useful to the government of Niger to improve the quality of services offered. As part of the scale up process, the government needs to consider strategies that ensure that all new clients are segmented and design an approach that is sustainable and does not risk failing should there be stock-out of segmentation sheets or loss of counseling cards. This type of targeted counseling could improve the quality of services offered and ideally lead to increased contraceptive use in Niger.

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