# Capitalizing on Community Groups to Improve Women’s Resilience to Maternal and Child Health Challenges: Protocol for a Human-Centered Design Study in Tanzania

**Authors:** Kahabi Ganka Isangula, Aminieli Itaeli Usiri, Eunice Siaity Pallangyo

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/54323 · JMIR Research Protocols · 2024-09-10

## TL;DR

This study co-designs an intervention with women in Tanzania to improve their resilience to maternal and child health challenges using human-centered design.

## Contribution

The study introduces a co-designed intervention package leveraging Income Generation Associations to address maternal and child health challenges in low-resource settings.

## Key findings

- A 4-step human-centered design process was used to co-design an intervention package with women in IGAs.
- The intervention package was validated and refined through multistakeholder engagement.
- The final intervention package is ready for potential scaling in low- and middle-income countries.

## Abstract

Maternal and neonatal deaths remain a major public health issue worldwide. Income Generation Associations (IGAs) could form a critical entry point to addressing poverty-related contributors. However, there have been limited practical interventions to leverage the power of IGAs in addressing the challenges associated with maternal care and childcare.

This study aims to co-design an intervention package with women in IGAs to improve their readiness and resilience to address maternal and child health (MCH) challenges using a human-centered design approach.

The study will use a qualitative descriptive design with purposefully selected women in IGAs and key MCH stakeholders in the Shinyanga and Arusha Regions of Tanzania. A 4-step adaptation of the human-centered design process will be used involving (1) mapping of IGAs and exploring their activities, level of women’s engagement, and MCH challenges faced; (2) co-designing of the intervention package to address identified MCH challenges or needs considering the perceived acceptability, feasibility, and sustainability; (3) validation of the emerging intervention package through gathering insights of women in IGAs who did not take part in initial steps; and (4) refinement of the intervention package with MCH stakeholders based on the validation findings.

The participants, procedures, and findings of each co-design step will be presented. More specifically, MCH challenges facing women in IGAs, a list of potential solutions proposed, and the emerging prototype will be presented. As of August 2024, we have completed the co-design of the intervention package and are preparing validation. The findings from the validation of the emerging prototype with a new group of women in IGAs and its refinement through multistakeholder engagement will be presented. A final co-designed intervention package with the potential to improve women’s resilience and readiness to handle MCH challenges will be generated.

The emerging intervention package will be discussed given relevant literature on the topic. We believe that subsequent testing and refinement of the package could form the basis for scaling up to broader settings and that the package could then be promoted as one of the key strategies in addressing MCH challenges facing women in low- and middle-income countries.

DERR1-10.2196/54323

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Maternal and (MESH:D000079262), Maternal and neonatal deaths (MESH:D066087)
- **Species:** Methanobacterium sp. Ch (species) [taxon 392019], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11422736/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11422736