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Dive into the research topics where Conrad Otterness is active.

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Featured researches published by Conrad Otterness.


Global health, science and practice | 2014

Keeping community health workers in Uganda motivated: key challenges, facilitators, and preferred program inputs

Aurélie Brunie; Patricia Wamala-Mucheri; Conrad Otterness; Angela Akol; Mario Chen; Leonard Bufumbo; Mark A. Weaver

In Uganda, community-based health programs using volunteers should focus on strengthening support systems to address transportation and stockout issues and on improving links with the health structure while reinforcing effort recognition, status, and acquisition of new skills. In Uganda, community-based health programs using volunteers should focus on strengthening support systems to address transportation and stockout issues and on improving links with the health structure while reinforcing effort recognition, status, and acquisition of new skills. Introduction: In the face of global health worker shortages, community health workers (CHWs) are an important health care delivery strategy for underserved populations. In Uganda, community-based programs often use volunteer CHWs to extend services, including family planning, in rural areas. This study examined factors related to CHW motivation and level of activity in 3 family planning programs in Uganda. Methods: Data were collected between July and August 2011, and sources comprised 183 surveys with active CHWs, in-depth interviews (IDIs) with 43 active CHWs and 5 former CHWs, and service statistics records. Surveys included a discrete choice experiment (DCE) to elicit CHW preferences for selected program inputs. Results: Service statistics indicated an average of 56 visits with family planning clients per surveyed CHW over the 3-month period prior to data collection. In the survey, new skills and knowledge, perceived impact on the community, and enhanced status were the main positive aspects of the job reported by CHWs; the main challenges related to transportation. Multivariate analyses identified 2 correlates of CHWs being highly vs. less active (in terms of number of client visits): experiencing problems with supplies and not collaborating with peers. DCE results showed that provision of a package including a T-shirt, badge, and bicycle was the program input CHWs preferred, followed by a mobile phone (without airtime). IDI data reinforced and supplemented these quantitative findings. Social prestige, social responsibility, and aspirations for other opportunities were important motivators, while main challenges related to transportation and commodity stockouts. CHWs had complex motivations for wanting better compensation, including offsetting time and transportation costs, providing for their families, and feeling appreciated for their efforts. Conclusion: Volunteer CHW programs in Uganda and elsewhere need to carefully consider appropriate combinations of financial and nonfinancial inputs for optimal results.


International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health | 2011

What happens to contraceptive use after injectables are introduced? An analysis of 13 countries.

Elizabeth G. Sutherland; Conrad Otterness; Barbara Janowitz

CONTEXT Although the introduction of a new method is generally hailed as a boon to contraceptive prevalence, uptake of new methods can reduce the use of existing methods. It is important to examine changing patterns of contraceptive use and method mix after the introduction of new methods. METHODS Demographic and Health Survey data from 13 countries were used to analyze changes in method use and method mix after the introduction of the injectable in the early 1990s. Subgroup analyses were conducted among married women who reported wanting more children, but not in the next two years (spacers), and those who reported wanting no more children (limiters). RESULTS Modern method use and injectable use rose for each study country. Increases in modern method use exceeded those in injectable use in all but three countries. Injectable use rose among spacers, as well as among limiters of all ages, particularly those younger than 35. In general, the increase in injectable use was partially offset by declines in use of other methods, especially long-acting or permanent methods. CONCLUSION Family planning programs could face higher costs and women could experience more unintended pregnancies if limiters use injectables for long periods, rather than changing to longer acting and permanent methods, which provide greater contraceptive efficacy at lower cost, when they are sure they want no more children.


Studies in Family Planning | 2012

Impact of a Provider Job Aid Intervention on Injectable Contraceptive Continuation in South Africa

Joy Noel Baumgartner; Chelsea Morroni; Regina Mlobeli; Conrad Otterness; Geoffrey Buga; Mario Chen

Arriving late for scheduled contraceptive reinjections is common in many countries and contributes to discontinuation when providers are unsure how to manage such clients. A clinic-randomized cohort and cross-sectional study with more than 5,000 clients using injectable contraceptives was conducted in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa to test the effectiveness of a provider job aid for managing late-returning clients and promoting continued use of the method. A marginally significant difference in reinjection rates between intervention and control groups was found for those up to two weeks late, and reanalysis excluding one clinic that experienced stockout issues revealed a significant difference. The difference in reinjection rates for those 2-12 weeks late was also found to be significant. The one-reinjection cycle continuation rate for the intervention group was higher than that for the control group, but the difference was not statistically significant. Appropriate management of late-returning clients is critical, and this study illustrates that reinjection rates can be significantly increased with a low-resource provider job aid.


Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care | 2014

Prospects for coitally-dependent hormonal contraception: perspectives from women in urban Kenya and Nigeria

Dawn S. Chin-Quee; Kelly Ladin L'Engle; Conrad Otterness

Introduction Emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) were developed and marketed with the emergency aspect firmly in mind, but research and anecdotal evidence indicate that some women use them as a form of regular contraception, spurring efforts in the reproductive health community to explore the development of a coitally-dependent oral contraceptive pill. Methods We asked women of reproductive age in Nairobi, Kenya and Lagos, Nigeria how likely they would be to use a hypothetical pericoital pill and why. Results Bivariate logistic regressions indicated that women aged 18–35 years, with secondary education or higher, and who had ever used condoms or short-acting methods, were more likely to say that they would use this hypothetical pill. Women who had ever used a family planning method or ECPs were also more likely to say they would use this pill. The likely adopters reported that they would use the pericoital method if it prevented pregnancy with little or no health problems and was convenient and easy to use. Conclusion The findings suggest that should a safe and effective pericoital hormonal pill become available then a significant number of women would adopt this method.


Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2016

Hormonal contraceptives for contraception in overweight or obese women

Laureen M Lopez; Alissa Bernholc; Mario Chen; Thomas W Grey; Conrad Otterness; Carolyn Westhoff; Alison Edelman; Frans M. Helmerhorst


Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2016

Progestin-only contraceptives: effects on weight

Laureen M Lopez; Shanthi Ramesh; Mario Chen; Alison Edelman; Conrad Otterness; James Trussell; Frans M. Helmerhorst


International Family Planning Perspectives | 2007

TIMELINESS OF CONTRACEPTIVE REINJECTIONS IN SOUTH AFRICA AND ITS RELATION TO UNINTENTIONAL DISCONTINUATION

Joy Noel Baumgartner; Chelsea Morroni; Regina Mlobeli; Conrad Otterness; Landon Myer; Barbara Janowitz; John Stanback; Geoffrey Buga


Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2013

Behavioral interventions for improving condom use for dual protection

Laureen M Lopez; Conrad Otterness; Mario Chen; Markus J. Steiner


International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health | 2011

Injected with controversy: sales and administration of injectable contraceptives in drug shops in Uganda.

John Stanback; Conrad Otterness; Martha Bekiita; Olivia Nakayiza; Anthony K. Mbonye


Contraception | 2012

Bridge over troubled waters: considerations in transitioning emergency contraceptive users to hormonal methods

Dawn Chin-Quee; Laura Hinson; Kelly L'Engle; Conrad Otterness; Barbara Janowitz

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Chelsea Morroni

University College London

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