International Development Grant

Improving Maternal Participation and Access to Community Training

Project Number: CA-3-D002023001

Status: Closed

Country/Region:

Guatemala 70.00%
Honduras 30.00%

Maximum Contribution: $4,377,440.00

Start Date: February 25, 2016

End Date: November 30, 2020

Duration: 4.8 years

Project Description

The project Improving Maternal Participation and Access to Community Training (IMPACT) aims to increase the utilization and improve the delivery of culturally appropriate health services to pregnant and lactating mothers and their children in 111 hard-to-reach indigenous communities in Guatemala and Honduras. Project activities include: (1) providing maternal newborn and child health (MNCH) centres with essential health care equipment and ensuring that they are adequately staffed with well-trained MNCH aides; (2) delivery of lactation workshops as well as one-on-one counseling and support to encourage women to initiate early and exclusive breastfeeding of their infants for at least five months; (3) delivering awareness raising workshops among key decision-makers in communities of MNCH related health risks and enabling the health-related decision-making of vulnerable women; and (4) delivery of nutrition demonstration workshops to pregnant and lactating women. This project is expected to contribute to the improved health of 68 400 women and children including 13 800 girls and 13 300 boys. In addition more than 160 000 people are expected to benefit indirectly. CAUSE Canada is implementing this project in collaboration with CAUSE Honduras CAUSE Guatemala and Instituticion Mam de Desarrollo Integral (IMDI).

Expected Results

The expected outcomes for this project include: (1) increased use of MNCH services by pregnant women mothers and children under 5 years in target regions of Guatemala and Honduras; (2) improved gender-sensitive delivery of essential health services by trained MNCH male and female practitioners for target communities in Guatemala and Honduras; and (3) increased consumption of nutritional food and supplements by pregnant and lactating mothers as well as their children under 5 years of age in targeted regions in Guatemala and Honduras.

Progress & Results Achieved

Results achieved as of the end of the project (November 2020) include: (1) increased the rate of pregnant women receiving four or more prenatal visits to 81% in Guatemala against a target of 80% and 83.5% in Honduras against a target of 85%; (2) supported the percentage of pregnant women and mothers who reported satisfaction with access to maternal newborn and child health services in the past year in reaching 88% in Guatemala and 99.5% in Honduras against a target of 50%; (3) supported the rate of women believing that they can participate in community health meetings equally in reaching 86.5% in Guatemala and 100% in Honduras against a target of 80%; (4) delivered 1 120 nutrition workshops (848 in Guatemala and 272 in Honduras) for 16 380 pregnant and lactating women and mothers of children under the age of five to improve women’s and babies’ diets; and (5) facilitated 93% of health practitioners in Guatemala and 89.5% in Honduras in identifying at least two priority gender issues in maternal newborn and child health against a target of 100%.

Key Information

Executing Agency:
CAUSE Canada (Christian Aid for Under-Assisted Societies Everywhere)

Reporting Organization:
Global Affairs Canada

Program:
YFMInternaAssistPartnershp&Programing Br

Last Modified:
September 19, 2025

Development Classifications

DAC Sector:

Basic nutrition 10.45%
Health education 83.51%
Reproductive health care 6.04%

Aid Type: Project-type interventions

Collaboration: Bilateral

Finance Type: Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation

Selection Mechanism:
Call for Proposals

Policy Markers
Level 1 Gender equality
Level 1 Environmental sustainability (cross-cutting)
Level 1 Children's issues
Level 1 Indigenous Issues
Major Funding (>$1M)
Budget Breakdown
2017-04-01 to 2018-03-31 $4,377,440 CAD
Geographic Information
092
Reference ID: 383