The road to success for many immunization programs is rarely straight-forward and programs will often be called on to innovate in order to thrive. At Shela Borkoshe, the challenge was a fragmented and formulaic planning process that had plagued EPI and stagnated progress in service delivery. Tackling old problems in a new way is like flooding a light in dark corners and in this case, the longstanding ineffective planning practices at Shela Borkoshe desperately required illumination.
In 2017 for the first time ever, Shela Borkoshe had the opportunity to undergo a revamp of their planning process, using a bottom-up approach. Non-health stakeholders that had never participated previously were invited to take part. Supported by John Snow, Inc. (JSI) through its Universal Immunization through Improving Family Health Services (UI-FHS) project in Ethiopia, this Woreda-wide micro-planning exercise was a new experience for all facilities. Within the Sodo Zuria Woreda, the goal of the program was to empower local health teams such as the one at Shela Borkoshe and its non-health actors through action-driven training on Quality Improvement tools and processes to unlock root problems and customize local solutions needed in the strengthening of routine immunization (RI) and other health services.
Challenges of Routine Immunization Services at Shela Borkoshe
- Children missing out on vaccines
- Inadequate resourcing of the health system
- Poor quality data
Everybody Matters
Immunization planning had for the longest time been confined to the facility level. However, Shela Borkoshe through its involvement with the Reaching Every District using Quality Improvement (RED-QI) initiative was now able to adopt a comprehensive planning approach that eliminated the endemic bottlenecks that had persisted over the years. A three-day intense RED-QI training exercise for Woreda health staff, Shela Borkoshe HC/PHCU staff and health workers from the affiliated health posts enabled this transformational process. The introduction of new voices was revolutionary and long overdue.
Shela Borkoshe’s biggest task was to rally its partners and keep them actively engaged and interested throughout the QI process and beyond. All leaders from village level to Woreda health and non-health authorities involved in decision-making over resource allocation now had a valued voice in the process.
There was a growing understanding that everybody was needed and was an important part of the solution – from communities, health workers to government.
The real value of QI tools and processes e.g., fishbone analysis, root cause analysis, participatory mapping, was felt when they were brought to bear on real problems. It means moving the tools and concepts from the abstract, applying them to real problems and getting the stakeholders in those contexts to understand, internalize and use them to find solutions to their own self-articulated issues. Shela Borkoshe’s partners had come to understand that planning for EPI and other health services was no longer the exclusivity of the health care staff alone but theirs as well. It was a process that helped to clearly articulate the role of each player from their perspective in a very practical manner. It involved simplifying the language, processes and tools step-wise from the most basic neighborhood level (Kebele) to the top-most district level (Woreda).
Communities knew their localities better than anyone else, from site selection for sessions, to local leaders knowing the whereabouts of their people with absolute precision. This knowledge became invaluable for developing local solutions. For Shela Borkoshe, going down to the Kebele level was the first piece in the bottom-up target setting. Here, the community leaders conducted head counts of children that provided first-hand verifiable name-based data about the target population, something that had not been done in a long time. Having updated headcounts revealed that the health facilities were not providing sufficient number of outreach services to reach every child. The decision was taken to plan for expanded RI activities in the new micro-plan to correct this.
Recasting Routing Immunization
Before |
After |
Poor planning approach leading to inaccurate data |
Bottom-up micro-planning approach using QI tools and more accurate target data |
Insufficient outreach in the hardest-to-reach area |
Expanded reach of RI and health services |
Missing community voice and participation of local leaders |
Reinvigorated community and local leaders’ engagement |
Insufficient resource allocation |
Increased funding from local sources |
As the individuals that customarily bear the responsibility for the planning, delivery and management of routine immunization (RI) activities, health care workers understand which operational issues have a strong effect on their work. The micro-plan became an advocacy tool that was used vigorously in the quest for resources. In the months that followed, the micro-plan would be presented to the Health Center Governing Board (the body that makes expenditure decisions for the facility) leading to a 21% increase in funding for the PHCU. The funding was sufficient for the expanded activities identified at the community level. Critical among these were conducting targeting activities for previously missed children, mobilization for outreach activities in hard-to-reach areas and the tracking of children from inception to completion of immunization schedules.
Results: Progress in Numbers
- 7 new outreach sites added
- 84 additional monthly immunization sections in 2018
- 396 outreach sessions added across Sodo Zuria Woreda in 2018, with 276 conducted in hard-to-reach areas
21% Increase in funding for the Shela Borkoshe PHCU following new micro-plan
Sustaining the effort beyond the plan
The tendency to go back to the familiar is tempting. What’s noteworthy though is that years after RED-QI closed out, the seeds of ownership for Shela Borkoshe’s micro-planning process continue to thrive. Twenty months into the new process, stakeholders saw the results of their work (such as the expanded outreach in the community) which motivated them to stay the course to see the full plan implemented.
The Woreda staff have found a new and better way to solve problems and have remained committed to it. The Woreda health office has continued making annual health plans and continued delivering services to all communities through expanded outreach.