CONTENTS

        Chapters
  1. Research and Regulatory Approval
  2. Use of Injectables
  3. Effectiveness and Reversibility
  4. Side Effects and Complications
  5. More Evidence in the Cancer Debate
  6. Noncontraceptive Health Benefits
  7. Counseling Issues
  8. Communicating with the Public
  9. Maximizing Access and Quality

Published with this issue:

HIGHLIGHTS


Published by the Population Information Program, Center for Communication Programs, The Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, Maryland 21202-4012, USA

Volume XXIII, Number 2 August 1995

Training

Training on injectables is an opportunity to improve the overall quality of family planning services. Training programs have covered basic information about injectables, counseling skills, and giving injections safely.

The format and length of training depend on the background of providers. Experienced providers may need refresher training. They may not mention injectables when reviewing methods with clients (19, 171, 216, 225, 297) or they may not discuss side effects (71). In some studies fewer than one-half of clients starting or switching contraceptives received information about injectables.

Programs that are introducing injectables have devoted one or two weeks to training about injectables. In Bangladesh, for example, a program introducing injectables into community-based distribution (CBD) programs in two thanas (districts) conducted a 4-week course for CBD agents, one week of which was devoted to injectables. Surveyed after the course, however, the CBD workers said that they would have liked even more training—9 to 13 days (4). To train providers who do not know how to give injections may require two weeks, including practice giving injections into fruit and vegetables (144, 211, 254).

Providers also should know how to manage two rare but dangerous side effects of injectables: anaphylactic shock, a potentially fatal reaction to an injected drug, and heavy bleeding. There have been four reports in the medical literature of severe allergic reaction or anaphylactic shock related to DMPA (43, 189, 315, 353) and a few additional reports to Upjohn's voluntary reporting database (274). Two women reacted to components of the solution in which DMPA is dissolved, polyethylene glycol or polysorbate 80, for example. The cause of the allergic reaction in the other women was not identified. Most women recovered after treatment with epinephrine, Benadryl® (diphenhydramine hydrochloride), or other drugs. Management of heavy bleeding may require treatment with oral or injectable estrogen and blood tests for anemia (333) (see Chapter 4.1 Bleeding Changes).

Counseling training. To develop providers' counseling skills, trainers can:

  • Emphasize that knowledge of side effects generally helps women use injectables.
  • Set up role-playing, in which trainees improvise a conversation between a client and a provider. If possible, trainers can videotape trainees to show them what they do well and what needs improvement.
  • Present case studies of counseling sessions to stimulate discussion. Trainees may describe the barriers to good counseling that they face—for example, lack of privacy—and discuss possible solutions.
  • Discuss critical incidents, situations that trainees might confront in the clinic and that call for decisions—for example, a user of injectables returns with frequent bleeding. Trainees can discuss how they would respond.
  • Arrange for trainees to observe actual counseling sessions or to counsel clients under supervision.
  • Address biases about injectables. Courses in the Philippines allocate time at the beginning to allow trainees to voice their concerns. Trainers distribute research studies and invite an authority on DMPA use in the Philippines to speak (51).
  • Visit trainees three to six months after the course. Trainers can observe trainees applying their counseling skills and give them further guidance.
  • Set up periodic refresher training. In Bangladesh CBD workers receive one or two days of refresher training six months after initial training (211). Also, these workers can get information once a month when they return to the clinic for supplies and their salary (4).
Training programs must require trainees to demonstrate the skills needed to provide injectables—for example, counseling and giving the injection. Such competency-based training improves on training programs that simply measure increases in knowledge. Programs need to decide if trainees should pass a test in order to provide injectables or train others, or if just attending the course is enough.

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