Development of National Child Survival Action Plan (NCSAP) Consultant 156 views0 applications


USAID Momentum Country and Global Leadership Quality of Care (MCGL QoC) project is a multi-year project that provides technical and capacity development assistance (TCDA) to ministries of health and other country partners to expand global leadership and learning and enable government-led partnerships to deliver high-quality, evidence-based interventions that accelerate reductions in maternal, newborn, and child mortality and morbidity. MCGL QOC has a geographic scope restricted to the national level but extended through partners to currently 24 States of Nigeria.

The four (4) objectives of MCGL QoC project are to:

  1. Support the Government of Nigeria to collaborate with academia by commissioning research on QoC for maternal, child, and Newborn health in the six geopolitical zone
  2. Support national adaptation of WHO standards of quality care for Newborn health including the Small and Sick Newborn (SSNB) and paediatric health and develop the strategy for its implementation.
  3. Support USAID IP in collaborating with target states in ensuring that quality improvement activities are reflected in the zonal and national programs, monitoring, and evaluation framework.
  4. Support the FMoH’s DPRS in monitoring and evaluating QoC in line with the QoC network goals, strategic objectives, and implementation (and monitoring) framework, as well as the 2016 WHO standards for improving quality of maternal and Newborn care in health facilities and the 2018 WHO standards for improving the quality of care for children and young adolescents in health facilities [and the 2019 WHO WASH in health care facility standards to which Nigeria has committed]

To support national adaptation of WHO standards of quality care for Newborn health (including SSNB) and paediatric health and develop the strategy for its implementation outlined in the second project objective, MCGL QoC hopes to collaborate with other partners especially those within USAID and the FMoH to participate in a range of ongoing efforts that contribute to the desired impact

Justification:

Nigeria’s child health indices are poor having the highest contribution (10%) to the global under-five mortality profile despite just being 2% of the total world population. To be on track towards achieving the SDG 3.2 target for under-five by 2030, there is an urgent need to develop a National Child Survival Action Plan (NCSAP) that will articulate interventions, plans strategy, implementation and monitoring framework for under-five health interventions in Nigeria. With emphasis on high quality care, the current efforts must be accelerated by a factor of 80% across all health delivery platforms, (facility, outreach and community) for Nigeria to meet the SDG 3.2 set target on under-five mortality reduction. Consequent to the very poor under-five indices, the Federal Ministry of Health, in collaboration with the Global Child Health Task Force, initiated the process of developing a National Child Survival Action Plan for Nigeria (NCSAP) with a view to galvanising actions that will accelerate efforts towards reducing the prevalence and incidence of childhood killer diseases, improving low coverage of childhood routine immunisation and reducing the high prevalence of childhood under-nutrition.

To support the development of the NCSAP, the USAID MCGL-QoC wishes to support the FMoH to engage the services of a Technical Expert who will facilitate the process for the development of NCSAP.

The overall objective of this technical assistance is to support FMOH in developing a comprehensive, actionable and costed NCSAP that will guide the implementation of child survival interventions at the national, state, and local levels. USAID MCGL-QoC will support one of the consultants that the FMOH requires to achieve this important task.

Amount Payable Per Day: N70,000 – N100,000

Responsibilities

The Policy and Strategy Consultants as well as the Costing/ M&E Consultant on NCSAP will collaborate with the Federal Ministry of Health (FHD, NMEP, NASCP, DPRS, DHS), NPHCDA, and donor and development organisations that fund under-five health interventions in Nigeria to:

  • Conduct a bottleneck and situation analysis on under-five interventions to be incorporated into the NCSAP
  • Develop draft NCSAP document for review and validation by key stakeholders
  • Write a comprehensive report on the activities conducted for the development of NCSAP

Required Qualifications

  • Advanced degree (Masters or PhD) in public health or other related fields of studies
  • More than ten years of experience in health system strengthening with various levels of Government and/or Implementing Partners in Nigeria
  • Previous experience in working on under-five Child health
  • Knowledge of health policies in Child health
  • Competencies in strategic analysis and health program costing
  • Fluent in English language, with the ability to write clearly and concisely
  • Strong interpersonal skills and ability to work well in a diverse multilevel team.

Applications will be considered on a rolling basis. Interested candidates are advised to apply early.

Jhpiego offers competitive salaries and a comprehensive employee benefits package.

Applicants must submit a single document for upload to include: cover letter, resume, and references.

Note: The successful candidate selected for this position will be subject to a pre-employment background investigation.

Jhpiego is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer

Jhpiego, a Johns Hopkins University affiliate, is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of gender, marital status, pregnancy, race, color, ethnicity, national origin, age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, other legally protected characteristics or any other occupationally irrelevant criteria. Jhpiego promotes Affirmative Action for minorities, women, individuals who are disabled, and veterans.

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Responding to the Changing Needs of Women and Families Worldwide

Since its founding in 1974, Jhpiego has been innovating to save the lives of women and families worldwide. From the first day, Jhpiego has been asking the question: How can we make lifesaving services available and accessible to the people who need them—all over the world?

Dr. Theodore M. King, an early innovator and champion for women’s health, was the moving force behind the founding of Jhpiego, an affiliate of Johns Hopkins University. In the early 1970s, King recognized the need to make physicians, nurses and administrators from developing countries aware of reproductive health breakthroughs, such as laparoscopy (a procedure used to inspect internal reproductive organs for infertility or to provide contraception by closing off the fallopian tubes) and modern contraceptives. Originally known as the Johns Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynecology and Obstetrics, the organization was funded through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Under King’s leadership, as a founder, trustee and later president of Jhpiego for 14 years, the organization conducted a steady stream of programs throughout the developing world.

How Did We Get from There to Here?

Early on, Jhpiego established itself as a leader in reproductive health training. Beginning in 1974, Jhpiego held training sessions on family planning/reproductive health for doctors and nurses in the USA In 1979, Jhpiego started its first in-country training programs in Tunisia, Brazil, Kenya, Nigeria, Thailand and the Philippines. From 1987 through 2004, Jhpiego conducted three global Training in Reproductive Health Projects, funded by USAID. Beginning in 1993, Jhpiego published learning materials on long-acting family planning methods.

Over the years—to respond more effectively to the needs of individual countries—Jhpiego became increasingly field-based and established its first field office in Kenya in 1993. Today, Jhpiego has field offices in more than 30 countries worldwide. Similarly, Jhpiego’s programming areas have expanded to meet changing needs in the field. In addition to family planning and reproductive health, Jhpiego now has expertise in maternal and child health, infection prevention and control, HIV/AIDS and infectious diseases.

Jhpiego’s work has also expanded to address reproductive health policy and guidelines and to support health systems strengthening. For example, in 1996 in Brazil, Jhpiego launched a performance and quality improvement approach, now known as Standards-Based Management and Recognition (SBM-R), which has since been implemented in 30 countries. SBM-R empowers health workers and facilities to improve the performance and quality of their services by providing them with the tools and methods they need to make decisions, solve problems and innovate at the local level.

Innovations in Training Methods and Technologies

In 1986, Jhpiego pioneered a competency-based training (CBT) approach that emphasizes learning by doing. CBT focuses on how the participant performs and promotes the trainer’s ability to encourage learning. Jhpiego also introduced the use of anatomic models for “humanistic training.” To minimize risk to clients, learners first practice on models until they achieve competency. In 1995, a clinical training skills manual—the cornerstone of Jhpiego’s training approach—was published. Using a systematic “training of trainers” approach, Jhpiego has created a global network of qualified physician, nurse and midwife trainers.

As early as 1984, Jhpiego collaborated with the University of the West Indies to deliver reproductive health courses, via satellite, to six islands in the Caribbean. In 1987, Jhpiego sponsored a global meeting on reproductive health education and technology with the World Health Organization (WHO) and introduced computer-assisted instruction to simulate clinical situations in several of its US-based courses. In 1995, ReproLine, an online source for reproductive health information, was launched. Today, Jhpiego continues to explore new learning technologies: mobile phones in Afghanistan, a computer-based learning management system in Ethiopia, computer-based training in Ghana, a distance learning program in Zambia.

Practical Solutions for Low-Resource Settings

Since the 1992 publication of its international reference standard Infection Prevention for Family Planning Service Programs, Jhpiego has been at the forefront in promoting evidence-based practices that can protect health care professionals, staff and clients from potentially life-threatening infections. To this end, Jhpiego has tested and introduced practical, low-cost infection prevention procedures that can be implemented effectively in settings with limited resources.

In developing countries, cervical cancer remains the leading cause of cancer deaths among women. In 1995, Jhpiego began research with the University of Zimbabwe to find a low-cost alternative to the Pap test that could make cervical cancer prevention a reality in low-resource settings. Based on the results of this research, Jhpiego helped form the Alliance for Cervical Cancer Prevention in 1999 and received funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to expand its cervical cancer program. Since that time, Jhpiego has developed and piloted the single visit approach in which women are screened and treated during the same visit.

In 1995, Jhpiego began addressing HIV/AIDS and its integration with family planning services. Six years later, Jhpiego began work in HIV voluntary counseling and testing with a USAID-funded project in Jamaica. In 2002, Jhpiego received its first funding from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for work in HIV/AIDS and, the following year, developed a global learning package on prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV—with CDC, WHO and university partners—to enable global scale-up. Also in 2003, Jhpiego began work on male circumcision for HIV prevention in Zambia. In 2008, Jhpiego developed a global learning package on male circumcision for HIV prevention with WHO and UNAIDS.

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0 USD Abuja CF 3201 Abc road Consultancy , 40 hours per week Jhpiego

USAID Momentum Country and Global Leadership Quality of Care (MCGL QoC) project is a multi-year project that provides technical and capacity development assistance (TCDA) to ministries of health and other country partners to expand global leadership and learning and enable government-led partnerships to deliver high-quality, evidence-based interventions that accelerate reductions in maternal, newborn, and child mortality and morbidity. MCGL QOC has a geographic scope restricted to the national level but extended through partners to currently 24 States of Nigeria.

The four (4) objectives of MCGL QoC project are to:

  1. Support the Government of Nigeria to collaborate with academia by commissioning research on QoC for maternal, child, and Newborn health in the six geopolitical zone
  2. Support national adaptation of WHO standards of quality care for Newborn health including the Small and Sick Newborn (SSNB) and paediatric health and develop the strategy for its implementation.
  3. Support USAID IP in collaborating with target states in ensuring that quality improvement activities are reflected in the zonal and national programs, monitoring, and evaluation framework.
  4. Support the FMoH’s DPRS in monitoring and evaluating QoC in line with the QoC network goals, strategic objectives, and implementation (and monitoring) framework, as well as the 2016 WHO standards for improving quality of maternal and Newborn care in health facilities and the 2018 WHO standards for improving the quality of care for children and young adolescents in health facilities [and the 2019 WHO WASH in health care facility standards to which Nigeria has committed]

To support national adaptation of WHO standards of quality care for Newborn health (including SSNB) and paediatric health and develop the strategy for its implementation outlined in the second project objective, MCGL QoC hopes to collaborate with other partners especially those within USAID and the FMoH to participate in a range of ongoing efforts that contribute to the desired impact

Justification:

Nigeria’s child health indices are poor having the highest contribution (10%) to the global under-five mortality profile despite just being 2% of the total world population. To be on track towards achieving the SDG 3.2 target for under-five by 2030, there is an urgent need to develop a National Child Survival Action Plan (NCSAP) that will articulate interventions, plans strategy, implementation and monitoring framework for under-five health interventions in Nigeria. With emphasis on high quality care, the current efforts must be accelerated by a factor of 80% across all health delivery platforms, (facility, outreach and community) for Nigeria to meet the SDG 3.2 set target on under-five mortality reduction. Consequent to the very poor under-five indices, the Federal Ministry of Health, in collaboration with the Global Child Health Task Force, initiated the process of developing a National Child Survival Action Plan for Nigeria (NCSAP) with a view to galvanising actions that will accelerate efforts towards reducing the prevalence and incidence of childhood killer diseases, improving low coverage of childhood routine immunisation and reducing the high prevalence of childhood under-nutrition.

To support the development of the NCSAP, the USAID MCGL-QoC wishes to support the FMoH to engage the services of a Technical Expert who will facilitate the process for the development of NCSAP.

The overall objective of this technical assistance is to support FMOH in developing a comprehensive, actionable and costed NCSAP that will guide the implementation of child survival interventions at the national, state, and local levels. USAID MCGL-QoC will support one of the consultants that the FMOH requires to achieve this important task.

Amount Payable Per Day: N70,000 - N100,000

Responsibilities

The Policy and Strategy Consultants as well as the Costing/ M&E Consultant on NCSAP will collaborate with the Federal Ministry of Health (FHD, NMEP, NASCP, DPRS, DHS), NPHCDA, and donor and development organisations that fund under-five health interventions in Nigeria to:

  • Conduct a bottleneck and situation analysis on under-five interventions to be incorporated into the NCSAP
  • Develop draft NCSAP document for review and validation by key stakeholders
  • Write a comprehensive report on the activities conducted for the development of NCSAP

Required Qualifications

  • Advanced degree (Masters or PhD) in public health or other related fields of studies
  • More than ten years of experience in health system strengthening with various levels of Government and/or Implementing Partners in Nigeria
  • Previous experience in working on under-five Child health
  • Knowledge of health policies in Child health
  • Competencies in strategic analysis and health program costing
  • Fluent in English language, with the ability to write clearly and concisely
  • Strong interpersonal skills and ability to work well in a diverse multilevel team.

Applications will be considered on a rolling basis. Interested candidates are advised to apply early.

Jhpiego offers competitive salaries and a comprehensive employee benefits package.

Applicants must submit a single document for upload to include: cover letter, resume, and references.

Note: The successful candidate selected for this position will be subject to a pre-employment background investigation.

Jhpiego is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer

Jhpiego, a Johns Hopkins University affiliate, is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of gender, marital status, pregnancy, race, color, ethnicity, national origin, age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, other legally protected characteristics or any other occupationally irrelevant criteria. Jhpiego promotes Affirmative Action for minorities, women, individuals who are disabled, and veterans.

EEO IS THE LAW

#LI- MO1

2023-09-20

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