Expanding Integrated Competency-Focused Health Worker Curricula for Maternal Infant and Young Child Nutrition
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. What Learning Is Needed and by Whom?
3. What Exists—Mapping a Curriculum
4. Analysing Expected Learning Outcomes
5. More Than Curriculum Alone
- Policy advocacy that highlights the importance of MIYCN including allocating on-going budgets for pre-service training and support for educators;
- Establishment of varied experience placements with trained and supported educators;
- Coordinated pre-service and in-service training to ensure students and qualified staff have unified and contextualised knowledge and skills and budgeted without relying on free sessions provided by commercial interests as a means of marketing their products;
- Communication with students, professional organisations, education providers, funders, employers, and the community regarding expectations, standards, and role descriptions, to avoid imposing a new curriculum without effective consultation and evaluation;
- Evidence-generation on training outcomes, including discussion with those graduated within the past 2–3 years, regarding their self-assessment of competency and any learning need not met within pre-service training.
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Awareness Level | Generalist Level | Specialist Level |
---|---|---|
Offer a mother who is breastfeeding a seat and drinking water as she waits at a clinic. | Respond to a pregnant woman’s questions on how she could breastfeed after returning to work. | Develop a plan for establishing a milk supply with a pregnant woman expecting an infant requiring immediate major surgery. |
Select post-op pain relief appropriate for a mother who is breastfeeding. | Assist a mother to find a comfortable position for breastfeeding following surgery. | Assess a young child for undernutrition, determine a suitable supplementation plan, explain its use, and monitor the child’s progress. |
Monitor that materials marketing less healthy foods are not appearing in the health facility. | Explain how to obtain and take the recommended micronutrient supplements. | Participate in a team developing national guidelines related to MIYCN. |
Know the sources for referral for nutrition information or difficulties. | Discuss healthy eating choices with a pregnant woman who is overweight. | Assist a family with a young child with neurological challenges to develop feeding skills. |
Provide facilities to facilitate clean and safe complementary feeding when attending a clinic appointment. | Review key aspects of complementary feeding with caregivers of an infant approaching 6 months old. | Develop an appropriate plan for a lactating woman referred for undernutrition, explain it and discuss with the woman, and monitor her progress. |
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Becker, G.E.; Cashin, J.; Nguyen, T.T.; Zambrano, P. Expanding Integrated Competency-Focused Health Worker Curricula for Maternal Infant and Young Child Nutrition. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 518. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080518
Becker GE, Cashin J, Nguyen TT, Zambrano P. Expanding Integrated Competency-Focused Health Worker Curricula for Maternal Infant and Young Child Nutrition. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(8):518. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080518
Chicago/Turabian StyleBecker, Genevieve Ellen, Jennifer Cashin, Tuan T. Nguyen, and Paul Zambrano. 2022. "Expanding Integrated Competency-Focused Health Worker Curricula for Maternal Infant and Young Child Nutrition" Education Sciences 12, no. 8: 518. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080518
APA StyleBecker, G. E., Cashin, J., Nguyen, T. T., & Zambrano, P. (2022). Expanding Integrated Competency-Focused Health Worker Curricula for Maternal Infant and Young Child Nutrition. Education Sciences, 12(8), 518. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12080518