[{"bbox": [93, 153, 1164, 206], "category": "Text", "text": "2. Disaggregation by sex, age and other indicators is essential to identify and target specific needs, but not all data needs to be disaggregated."}, {"bbox": [93, 218, 1014, 245], "category": "Text", "text": "3. Teenage pregnancies and neonatal causes are major drivers of maternal and under five mortalities."}, {"bbox": [93, 257, 1164, 307], "category": "Text", "text": "4. Improved government capacity to coordinate partners drives programme efficiency and accelerates achievement of results."}, {"bbox": [93, 323, 1164, 377], "category": "Text", "text": "5. Use of the RMNCAH Score Cards during performance reviews improved PHC service quality, coverage and accountability for results."}, {"bbox": [93, 388, 943, 415], "category": "Text", "text": "6. Mobile-based solutions can be a low-cost option for promoting health-seeking behaviours."}, {"bbox": [93, 427, 1164, 482], "category": "Text", "text": "7. Water, sanitation and hygiene improvement in PHC's drives improved health facility deliveries and improved quality of RMNCHN services."}, {"bbox": [93, 492, 1164, 574], "category": "Text", "text": "8. Community based Health Workers are central to increase coverage and uptake of lifesaving interventions and bridge the equity gaps as demonstrated by Volunteer Community Mobilizers being integrated into the CHIPS (Community Health Influencers Promoters and Services) programme of government."}, {"bbox": [93, 585, 1164, 663], "category": "Text", "text": "9. Motivating health workers through evidence-based incentives highlights the importance of facility-level decision-making in improving quality standards and the role of monetary and non-monetary incentives in retaining frontline health workers."}, {"bbox": [93, 677, 1164, 732], "category": "Text", "text": "10. The engagement of communities, including influencers, is essential to spread and build confidence in messaging, and to facilitate the adoption of new positive care practices."}, {"bbox": [93, 743, 1164, 797], "category": "Text", "text": "11. Social protection systems and programmes like the conditional cash transfers improves PHC utilisation however it had far reaching impact on targeted households/families and communities."}, {"bbox": [93, 808, 1164, 861], "category": "Text", "text": "12. A child not registered at birth is invisible – non-existent in the eyes of the government or the law. Without proof of identity, children are often excluded from education, health care and other vital services."}, {"bbox": [93, 873, 1148, 930], "category": "Text", "text": "These lessons learnt also point out the importance of ensuring regular monitoring of interventions and continuously sharing this information with the national authorities and community leaders."}, {"bbox": [85, 962, 399, 993], "category": "Section-header", "text": "## 3.5 The Intervention Logic"}, {"bbox": [93, 1008, 1164, 1141], "category": "Text", "text": "**If** relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies are enabled to better include and implement relevant SRHR policies that especially target and empower women and girls, **and** SRHR services are integrated in universal health coverage through a primary health care approach **and** accountability processes and measures supported to adequately capture and report utilisation data (while government commitment to universal health coverage through a PHC approach is sustained);"}, {"bbox": [93, 1167, 1164, 1276], "category": "Text", "text": "then there will be better inclusion and execution of SRHR/RMNCAH+N in national policies, plans and budgets **with** increased availability and demand for quality SRHR services **and** enhanced use of health data for further SRHR advocacy, resource mobilisation and mutual accountability resulting in overall benefit for families and larger society (provided government remains commitment to sustained favourable demographic transition);"}, {"bbox": [93, 1300, 1164, 1514], "category": "Text", "text": "**because** when girls and women are empowered and productively engaged, and live in supportive and safe communities, and systems and institutions provide high-quality, gender-equitable and responsive SRHR/RMNCAH+N care and services, and policies, laws, budgets and processes are supportive, and systems and institutions are coordinated, accountable and utilising evidence for decision making, then the result will be that women and girls will exercise their rights empowered by non-discriminated access to SRHR/RMNCAH+N services and participate as equal members of society. **This will increase proportion of population (families) achieving universal health coverage and a lead to a favourable demographic transition and population management in Nigeria.**"}, {"bbox": [1027, 1681, 1144, 1706], "category": "Page-footer", "text": "Page 14 of 26"}]