PVO
Contributions to Sustainable Child Health: Recommendations
and Next Steps for Evaluation,
Learning, and Advocacy |
| ORC
Macro offices, Calverton, Maryland
January
14, 2003 |
Twenty-five representatives
of private voluntary organizations (PVOs/NGOs), cooperating agencies (CAs),
the Child Survival Collaborations and Resources Group (CORE), and
the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) met
together at Macro International in Calverton, Maryland to discuss
the recently published CORE/CSTS+
sustainability study, its implications, and next steps.
A first Sustainability
Dialogue meeting was organized by CSTS+ and CORE in March 2000, and
effectively set the stage for the Sustainability Initiative which
was to follow. A report of the March 2000 meeting (in MicroSoft Word)
is available by clicking here.
You can also download a copy of the recommendations
(also in Word) from that meeting.
During the morning
session, various speakers discussed what had been learned through
the sustainability initiative study and current questions being tackled
by the PVO community and its institutional partners. Speakers included
Leo Ryan of the Child Survival Technical Support Project (CSTS+), Sheila
Lutjens of USAID's Child Survival and Health Grants Program (CSHGP),
Karen LeBan of CORE, Eric Sarriot of CSTS+, and Eric Swedberg of Save
the Children.
CSTS+ presented
a tool combining online support to sustainability evaluation design
in child survival, and access to a database of indicators and tools.
During the afternoon sessions, participants split into small groups
to discuss the proposed tool, and made recommendations to increase
its usability and value to the PVO community.
This report presents
a a brief summary of the morning presentations and the day’s
discussions, including key recommendations made by participants. It
also presents the history of the CORE-CSTS+ Sustainability Initiative.
Read
the day's agenda
Read
the participant list
If it has been
a while since you've read the Sustainability Initiative papers and
need a review, click here for "A
Quick Reminder about the Child Survival Sustainability Assessment
Framework"
Introductory
presentations
Although each
of the morning speakers addressed the topic of sustainability from
a different angle, several key themes overlapped in the presentations:
- Sustainability
still matters to USAID; so does documentation.
Sheila Lutjens
reminded participants that although there is not a separate section
called
 |
| Sheila
Lutjens--Chief, USAID Child Survival and Health Grants Program |
“sustainability,”
in the latest CSHGP request for applications, a discussion of sustainability
is scattered throughout the document and is an integral part of program
considerations. Lutjens
also emphasized that documentation is not just writing a report. “What
is the analysis that went behind the intervention?” she asked.
"Why did it work? Why did it not work?" “That will
be critical this next year,” she summarized. “We want
to be able to talk about the PVOs/NGOs and what they’ve accomplished,
but we need real hard data when we present our case.”
- Sustainability
and documentation also matter to CORE
“We still
don’t work together as well as we can to demonstrate the overall
impact, rather than just the [impact of the] organization,”
Karen LeBan explained. “We have to demonstrate that what we’re
doing really works--that our approaches can be brought to and maintained
at scale, that they reach the most disadvantaged, and they have more
lasting benefits than the alternatives--that’s the documentation
we have to be able to show.”
- Sustainability
is still confusing and not valued enough as a specific contribution
of PVOs/NGOs
The Sustainability
Initiative has shown that sustainability does indeed mean something
to the PVOs/NGOs, and that it can be presented in a coherent manner that
respects their pro-community, pro-poor, pro-equity approaches. But
we are still faced with confusing concepts of sustainability. Expectations
on, and judgments of, approaches are often based on individual assumptions
and biases. PVO approaches cannot be valued until they can communicate
clearly the benefits of their work for the long-term. And this brings
us back to the question of evaluation.
- There
are quite a few lost opportunities for PVOs/NGOs to learn
PVOs/NGOs have documented
"promising practices," but when it comes time to formulate
conclusions and generalizations about promising practices,”
LeBan explained, “we fall to pieces. We have very little reflective
documents within and across PVOs/NGOs. We have to concentrate on this.”
One area in which
she sees the possibility for improvement is in the learning cycle
itself. “We’re caught in a closed loop learning cycle,
as opposed to a spiraling learning cycle,” she explained. “Learning
is the key to improving sustainability. We need to break the thinking
that we’re all so unique and find the underlying patterns which
are key to learning. What are the patterns that cut across the different
PVOs/NGOs?” she asked.
- These
lost opportunities for learning translate into lost opportunities
for demonstrating the value of PVO approaches
 |
| Karen
LeBan--Executive Director, CORE, Inc. |
“We need
to learn better how to distill lessons learned,” she continued.
“We need data, and we really need to be able to share these
practices more with each other. This is especially true with 'underdeveloped
practices.' "How do we make something that appears to be sustainable
even more effective?” Each one of these practices require data,
analysis and reflection across the PVO community.
With the increase
in investment in the NGO sector, there is an urgency in PVOs/NGOs deciding
on what their role will be. "However,” she stated, “we
can only accomplish this if we have an aggregated view to be able
to guide us and advocate for what’s needed. This is what I hope
we can start moving toward with the Child Survival Sustainability
assessment tool.”
- We
have difficulty in measuring all dimensions relevant to sustainable
child health, including those being tackled by current child survival
projects
“We want
to know which determinants have changed, so we can have some idea
of which activities might have succeeded,” stated Eric Swedberg.
"We
want to be accountable for our choice of strategies. . . .We work
at various levels in order to be more sustainable. If you work just
at the individual level you might have limited health improvement.
If you work only at the social systems level, you have increased potential
for health improvement, but when you combine the two is where you
have self-sustained health improvement. By combining them, you have
the ultimate impact on health.”
Read
presentation summaries and download the PowerPoints
Morning
question-and-answer session
Various points
were brought out in the question-and-answer session following the
presentations.
Six main points
were made and are summarized below.
- If we want
to become more effective in advocacy, we need to have the right
information (data) and learn to value different types of data.
- There can
be an invisible tug-of-war between competing values such as coverage
and quality, depth and breadth and equity.
- There is a
lot in the external environment that is frequently out of our control,
but that we can influence.
- Every evaluation
comes at a cost. How much are we willing to do?
- We need more
funding and energy for research in addition to evaluation.
- We need more
data, yes, but we also need to make sure that it’s quality
data.
Read
more from the morning discussion.
Overview
of the proposed Online Assistant and Database
The proposed Online
Assistant and Database (CSSA-OAD) consists of three interactive parts:
- An online
assistant tool to assist users in developing a systematic evaluation
plan, focusing projects on progress toward sustainability
- An indicators
(and tools) database,
providing users of the assistant with links to tools, and existing
indicators they may use (considering the many “soft”
issues we need to address, the indicators’ database needs
to be an expanding database, capturing the innovations of PVOs/NGOs and
projects as they define their own evaluation plans
- An expanded
project database,
capturing the evaluation plans of individual projects (and feeding
into the indicators’ database) and collecting data from different
evaluation phases (this is what takes place already with the standardized
Rapid CATCH indicators, but would include a wider range of measures
used by projects).
Users--PVO backstop
and managers, possibly local partners--would access the tool through
a computer interface.

The purpose of
the Child Health CSSA-OAD is threefold:
- Assist individual
CSPs in developing an integrated evaluation plan toward sustainable
child health through:
- Access
to an indicator/tools database (as a first illustration, a first
presentation of assessment tools in the main dimensions of the
Child Survival Sustainability Assessment (CSSA) is available
on http://www.childsurvival.com/documents/CSTS/sustappendix.cfm);
- Guidance
through an online assistant or wizard.
- Improve cross-learning
by:
- Sharing
projects’ evaluation approaches and indicators through
expanding the project database, through individual projects’
contributions of measures, tools and indicators that they use
to the indicators’ database.
- Benchmarking
evaluation tools and indicators against each other over time.
- Improving
project evaluation research designs based on proactively collected
information. (Over time, as indicators and measures are improved,
the validity of the data collected would allow better and better
study designs, including post-intervention studies.)
- Build information
base and improve accountability at the Grants Program level through
time trends on project achievements in sustainability processes
and key outcomes.
The tool would
not require additional assessments from what PVOs/NGOs are already doing,
but suggest resources, and capture project level information.
It would not prescribe
anything more than the limited number of dimensions (three) and components
(six) included in the CSSA. Local processes and local decisions would
determine the specifics of what elements these components should include
and how they would be assessed. In this way, the OAD is essentially
a collective learning and capacity development tool.
Given that the
tool builds on the shell of the CSSA, a quick reminder of the CSSA
internal logic is provided here.
For the child
survival and health community (PVOs/NGOs, CORE, USAID, and CA partners),
the long-terms benefits of such a tool can be:
- Improved integration
of sustainability in CSP monitoring and evaluation plans
- Increased
demonstration of achievements and accountability
- Learning by
benchmarking tools, indicators and measures
- Expanded knowledge
base for more demonstrative research designs based on collective
PVO experience
- A powerful
advocacy information base.
Such an effort
will however require efforts from the different partners:
- CORE Working
Groups:
- Buy-in,
- Clear articulation
of overlaps between sustainability and current operational frameworks
(C/HH-IMCI; BEHAVE),
- Defining
a research & advocacy agenda, participating in validation
studies, setting guidelines;
- PVOs/NGOs
- Contributing
experience and project information through a new interface,
- “Early
adopters" can be considered for early testing;
- CSHGP
- Continued
dialogue with PVOs/NGOs to define the boundaries of what can be expected
from individual projects in terms of evaluation and what other
resources are needed
- Commitment
to sustainable child health agenda with CORE and PVOs/NGOs
- Communication
of efforts and results to high level stakeholders
- CSTS+
- Tool development,
PVO support, collaboration with CORE and its WGs
Participant
reaction to proposed tool
During the afternoon
session, participants worked in small groups and discussed their thoughts
on the proposed tool and their recommendations for improving it. Each
group listed their likes and dislikes about the tool as it was proposed.
Likes
Overall, participants liked the user-friendliness or menu driven approach,
and the categorization of indicators (and tools). The guidance offered
by the OAD in selecting indicators was valued particularly on issues
of capacity building at the organizational and community levels. The
flexibility in the use of the tool to design specific plans seemed
appreciated, along with the fact that it remains “open”
to expansion and evolution. Its accessibility, particularly for PVO
headquarters staff with easy access to the Internet, was considered
a plus. The comprehensiveness of the tool and the way it helps address
“abstract” evaluation questions was presented as something
of value.
Other comments
emphasized the value the OAD gives to major components of a complex
issues, and its potential to be an “empowering” tool,
even at the community level. Finally, participants recognized it as
a forum to share ideas and a mechanism to “get successes out.”
Dislikes
There was some confusion attributed to this first presentation. Participants
also felt that, as any new tool, it would require some time investment
and commitment to be appropriated by the NGOs. The dependency on technology
was also noted as having a flip side with regards to field applicability
in some cases.
Other dislikes
referred to the name of the tool, and to questions about the underlying
model (sustainability framework).
Read
the “likes and dislikes” list generated by the participants.
Participant
comments and questions on proposed tool
Participant questions
and discussions addressed both the proposed online assistant and database
and its underlying model, the Child Survival Sustainability Assessment
framework (CSSA).
Read
a summary of the afternoon’s comments and discussions on the
proposed tool
Recommendations
from the meeting and the proposed tool
Participants at
the meeting made a number of recommendations related to:
Action has already
been taken on some of these recommendations. Where this is the case,
this has been noted in the comment box below the recommendation. Useful
information related to specific points are also noted in the comment
box.
Recommendations
on the framework itself
The sustainability
assessment framework (CSSA) itself and linkages within it should be
made clearer:
- Provide a
10-15-page summary showing what the purpose and the thoughts behind
the tool are.
- Conduct more
presentations of the framework: CORE Meetings, etc.
- Increase the
language in the tool to include MOH/other governmental organizations.
- Review framework
for linkages to key concepts of prevention, and the multi-sectorial
platform of the C/HH IMCI framework, Q (quality), A (availability),
A (accessibility,) and D (demand).
- Try to emphasize
the issue of working together. Include coalition-building among
PVOs/NGOs as another element in dimension three.
Comment:
Some
of these issues are already addressed in the framework, but
depending on the intervention and context of the assessment,
the process of the CSSA will require that users focus on the
elements that are specifically relevant. |
Recommendations
on testing the tool
The CSSA
needs to be tested with PVO projects before developing the online
assistant (OAD)
- Adapt the
tool for evaluation of previous projects in order to choose/improve
future viability/applicability of the CSSA. (Recommendation to CSTS+/PVOs/NGOs)
- Field test
to look at actual use.
- Pilot test
the CSSA-OAD extensively in the field with PVOs/NGOs.
Comments:
A few PVOs/NGOs have manifested an interest or even started work
in this direction. Others have used some of its elements after
the Mali workshop of November 2001 (http://www.childsurvival.com/documents/workshops.cfm),
which provided a practical sense of the usability of the tool,
along with a field visit and mini-workshop with SC project partners
in Egypt, and a presentation in Senegal.
The sustainability
initiative study looked thoroughly into PVO sustainability planning
and evaluation practices; this information informed the development
of the CSSA. http://www.childsurvival.com/documents/CSTS/execsumbkgrnd.cfm
|
The resource
implications of the tool need to be assessed.
- Do a pilot
study on usability including level of effort (time, labor, and funds)
before full-blown implementation. (Prototype)
In order
for this initiative to be most helpful and useful there needs to be
a well-defined research agenda.
- Define
research questions and use the proposed tool to answer these questions.
For example, Which are more effective, horizontal or vertical programs?
- The tool could
demonstrate the importance of capacity building by PVOs/NGOs. Adapt the
tool to provide numbers for this argument.
Plan for
case studies and post-intervention studies.
- Plan for post-project
sustained behavior study of promising cases. Case studies might
be useful, especially for local learning about what processes have
worked or not.
- Include an
examination of [dissemination in] other sectors outside of health
for example, dissemination of health education messages over time
and different channels, or areas in which CHWs stopped working,
but sanitation facilities are maintained, etc.
- PVOs/NGOs working
in a country could collaborate on these dimensions and look at PVO-wide
impact over time.
USAID
should consider post-intervention assessment funding support.
Comment:
The
interest in these studies has been revived and different PVOs/NGOs
are now thinking about the methodological implications: What
are the research questions? What is the best study design? etc.
How do we build on previous lessons from the high impact meeting,
program reviews, sustainability initiative background document,
or CORE’s study by La Rue Seims (2000)? There is a sense
that this may be an opportunity for collaboration across PVOs/NGOs,
to achieve more than could be possible individually. |
Recommendations
on the development and implementation of the proposed OAD tool:
Partners
need to be involved at the field level.
- Partners should
be involved in tool refinement and development of specific content.
- PVO/NGO contributions
must be communicated to the national MOH. CSSA results should be
used in this way, not just for USAID, etc.
- Results have
to go to the national level. This is very important if you want
to run a program. If a consortium goes to the national level they
are much more likely to be heard.
Comments:
The
CSSA logic of a “local system” is totally open,
and even encourages this type of thinking: a participatory evaluation
in a local context for and with local partners. Use at the national
level would be a natural outcome of a sustainability assessment,
since accountability about progress on sustainability must be
shared, including through advocacy.
The online assistant and indicators database should capture
the field innovations and experiences and not merely offer a
menu of existing resources (which would be a meager menu for
some questions, where a lot of work still needs to take place,
in the field!) |
Collaboration
with other agencies at the US level for the development of the OAD
should not be ignored:
- Sustainability
needs to be tied to USAID’s priorities and opinion of sustainability,
e.g., now AID is trying to stop disability.
- USAID and organizations
working in child survival (CORE, CSTS+, and PVOs/NGOs) should meet and
discuss these issues with organizations working with civil society/democracy
and governance to share their experience with indicators and measurement.
- We need to
define the role of cooperative agencies in sustainability.
Comment:
The
example of the Mali workshop, where Mission and PVO specialists
of governance, as an example, got involved in addressing the
third dimension of the CSSA framework is an example of work
in this direction, which needs to be expanded. A February 6th,
2003 presentation at USAID was a first step in advancing in
this direction. |
Consider
the trade-offs and competing interests in deciding the level of flexibility
in the database.
- Make it clear(er)
that we can customize our dashboard.
- Keep flexibility
and customization in the tool to capture the innovations.
- Keep the tool
simple enough that there are not too many indicators.
- Define a few
key strategic sub-element areas for learning and reporting e.g.,
CHWs under community competency/capacity.
Comment:
There has to be a choice between a task force approach (i.e.
defining what indicators should be measured, etc.) with the
risk that not all innovations and not all PVO efforts will find
it suitable to their needs, or opening the tool as a resource
and knowledge sharing center, open to all approaches and only
constrained by the general shell of the CSSA. An open tool would
capture more in a first phase, before benchmarking tools and
measures against each other, and making recommendations as needed.
Given the limited funds for working groups, the time it takes
to build consensus, and the fact that we still lack good measures
on many processes, going the route of letting individual projects
contribute their wisdom may be the most likely to achieve results
in the short to mid-term.
We are still
learning about the measurement of key processes. Is it better
to compare, for example, “community participation”
according to a common set of indicators, or to compare how different
PVOs/NGOs measure “community participation?” |
At the
end of the day there needs to be a field-friendly version of the tool.
- Make the CSSA-OAD
available off-line on CD-ROM for field project managers and in multiple
languages.
- Make it a menu-driven
program (so as not to forget that the goal is to improve health).
- Develop tool
that is easily transferable from HQ to field and so on, given high
turnover rates within PVOs/NGOs and within CSPs.
Communication
of the benefits and continued participation are vital.
- The short-term
benefits of the tool should be communicated better.
- If PVOs/NGOs do
not use it, it will not be effective. Therefore, we should think
of ways to encourage people to use it.
- Create a working
group for CSSA-OAD to ensure PVO input and commitment.
Comment:
Participants at the meeting have agreed to be considered at
least as an “interest group,” since there is a concern
that working groups are already using much of the human resources
around the CS PVO community. |
Confidentiality
is key.
- Who would have
access to project-specific data? We need a clearly written statement
of the limits of confidentiality, and should study the balance between
open use and access and confidentiality. Maybe information could
be entered without directly linking it to a PVO.
Continue
technical assistance through face-to-face interactions.
- Budget/plan
for regional training once the pilot test is complete.
Conclusion
At the end of
the day, participants agreed to remain engaged as an “interest”
or “affinity” group within CORE. There was reluctance
to consider a new Working Group, considering how current WG members
are already stretched. Some PVOs/NGOs voiced interest in implementing some
of the recommendations, such as “retro-fitting” the model,
or conducting post-intervention studies with serious methodological
standards.
The discussions
on the cost, applicability, format, and purpose of the online assistant
tool will be ongoing between CSTS+, PVOs/NGOs, CORE, USAID and other potential
partners.
Next steps for
advancing thinking about the topic have been identified and specific
sessions will be organized during the APPLE CORE Spring Meeting, and
the Child Survival and Health Mini-University. |