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Advocacy Initiatives

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Title: Advocacy Initiatives


1
Advocacy Initiatives
2
Overview
  • Ipas South Africa
  • Providers as Advocates
  • Values Clarification and Attitude Transformation
  • Community Based Advocacy
  • Advocacy Work the Past
  • Advocacy Work Current
  • Questions

3
Ipas
  • Non-Governmental Not for Profit Organisation that
    has been working in South Africa since 1995.
  • Only NGO focusing exclusively on Termination of
    Pregnancy
  • Ipas is a non-profit organization that works
    around the world to increase women's ability to
    exercise their sexual and reproductive rights,
    especially the right to safe abortion. Ipas
    believes that no woman should have to risk her
    life, her health, her fertility, her well-being
    or the well-being of her family because she lacks
    reproductive health care and reproductive choice

4
Providers as Advocates
5
What is Advocacy and why do we need to advocate?
  • Advocacy is the strategic use of information to
    change policies that affect peoples lives.1.
    to expand the supply of quality, affordable,
    acceptable and accessible services for safe
    abortion
  • 2. to increase the demand from women and
    societies for more accessible and non-judgemental
    care for women seeking abortion care
  • 3. to defend the law and ensure SRH and R
    remain inviolate

6
Advocacy perspective
  • An advocacy perspective is one that sees many
    opportunities for influencing the community
    positively about the need for safe abortion care
    it helps us communicate with
  • Our family and friends
  • During or private encounters with our clients
  • To our leaders and colleagues
  • In more public arenas e.g. speaking at
    conferences, in community meetings,

7
Some risks
  • Public confrontation
  • Political stigma
  • Being harassed or threatened

8
Some benefits
  • Helping clients access much needed services and
    care
  • Respect in the community
  • Successful influence on policy makers and other
    providers

9
Things to remember
  • Presenting too much or too little information to
    substantiate our position
  • Using out-dated information or information that
    is irrelevant or mismatched
  • Too much emotion can create problems
  • Assumptions about who is and who is not on our
    side

10
Advocacy roles
  • EDUCATOR providers are subject matter experts,
    they have knowledge and experience
  • we find relevant information, we communicate our
    knowledge and we discuss
  • REPRESENTATIVE providers are witnesses, their
    experiences have taught them about specific
    issues and struggles
  • We tell stories we seek compassion and we speak
    in public about our experiences
  • PERSUADER persuaders use tools such as the
    latest research data, they organise community
    members, they deliberately manage specific
    topics, policies that need change

11
Values Clarification and Attitude Transformation
(VCAT)
12
What is VCAT?
  • Both a theory and an intervention
  • People discovering their values through a process
    of honest self-examination and open-minded search
    for lifes truths (Maslow, 1959 Rogers, 1961)
  • Interdependent processes of reasoning, emoting
    and behaving
  • VCAT is the process of examining ones basic
    values and reasoning for the purpose of
    understanding oneself, to discover what is
    important and meaningful
  • Valuing occurs when the head and heartunite in
    the direction of action (John Dewey, 1939)
  • Values Clarification a proven method to inform
    people and to create a safe space for people to
    evaluate their beliefs and values
  • Not a magic bullet needs committed leadership
    and follow through

13
Central Focus of VCAT
  • Helping people to use rational thinking and
    emotional awareness to examine personal
    behavioral patterns and to clarify and actualize
    their values
  • Thoughtful reflection, honest self-examination,
    and critical analysis of values and value
    conflicts
  • Structured, facilitated opportunity for people to
    experience new or reframed information that is
    designed to be accessible and relevant

14
(No Transcript)
15
Community Based Advocacy
16
Introduction
  • Community Engagement based on three objectives
  • Develop skills and increase knowledge on Sexual
    and Reproductive Health Rights to
  • increase contraceptive uptake
  • avoid unwanted pregnancies
  • seek safe abortions (including medical abortion)
  • recognize abortion complications
  • Change social norms and practices that stigmatize
    abortion
  • Expand women's, including young women's, ability
    to obtain abortion including medical
    abortion-related information and care

17
Some Highlights
  • Limpopo Program
  • Partnerships with CBOs
  • Mphilonhle 12 Schools, Mobile Clinics, SRH
    included in activities (Rural KZN)
  • Mosaic increased access to MVA MA through
    opening 2nd facility Mitchells Plain (Cape Town)
  • Masisukumeni Men and Boys and SRH (Rural
    Mpumalanga)
  • Masimanyane Rural Eastern Cape SRH awareness
    women and girls
  • University of Johannesburg SRH clinic (Urban
    Youth)
  • Linking the voices of the community with
    provincial services
  • Focus is on positioning TOP as part of
    comprehensive Sexual and Reproductive Health.
  • Educate in and out of school of youth about
    their SRH rights and choices lead workshops with
    their peers
  • Young Women and Abortion Study Peri-Urban study

18
Advocacy work the Past
19
Previous Activities 2002 to 2011
  • Values Clarification workshops all 9 provinces
    for 1st trimester access (throughout)
  • VC for 2nd trimester access all 9 provinces 2008
  • Providers As Advocates training 2008/09
  • Strategic Plan for the Implementation of the CTOP
    Act
  • Conscientious Objection Manual and Policy
    Document
  • SRH Workshops all provinces, public and pvt
    sector, always include advocacy initiatives
  • 2- year initiative (Ford Foundation) 9 CBOs in 3
    Countries Creating support for the Maputo Plan of
    Action Mozambique, South Africa and Zambia

20
Cont.
  • Values Clarification workshops with Communities,
    providers, management and provincial departments
    of health in Limpopo
  • Assisted Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Free State, North
    West, Western Cape with updating of TOP policies
    to include MA
  • Continued to work with National DOH re adoption
    of policy
  • Provinces to adopt own policies from July 2010
  • Successfully defended the Amendment Act Act 1
    2008 1st quarter FY08 (National Project)
  • Defended the CTOP Act through submissions to
    Parliament (June 2010)
  • Pvt Members Bill C. Dudley mandatory sonar,
    mandatory viewing of the sonar and mandatory
    counselling
  • Worked/working with SRH partners to include TOP
    in National AIDS Strategic Plan-2012-17

21
Lessons Learned
  • Need to be vigorous in supporting and defending
    the law
  • Legal environment does not always translate into
    access
  • Implementation of strict selection criteria
    ensures that - as far as possible - the correct
    person attends the training
  • Ensuring TOP is implemented through the system
    (Limpopo) rather than by a person (Mpumalanga)
    leads to sustainability of the service
  • Working with CBOs
  • Greater reach, larger audience, message spread
  • Greater knowledge greater access
  • Linking CBOs with Provincial Departments of
    Health

22
Training Totals per province
23
Provincial Clinical Orientations
24
MA Refresher Training
25
Advocacy Work Current
26
Advocacy work limited to funding
  • Donors
  • Focus of Department of Health
  • Need to have a focused approach
  • Combine skills support each other

27
July to November 2011 VCAT
28
Questions?
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