TELL US ABOUT VITALA GLOBAL FOUNDATION AND YOUR RELATIONSHIP TO THE SCTG AND SELF-CARE.
Vitala Global Foundation is a Canadian not-for-profit organization, founded in 2020 by Dr.Roopan Gill, recently awarded the Top 100 Most Powerful Women of Canada for 2022, and Dr. Genevieve Tam, Canadian trained obstetrician gynecologists with over 20+ years of expertise in addressing stigmatized sexual and reproductive health issues globally. Vitala Global’s mission is to revolutionize sexual and reproductive self-care through co-designed, holistic, and localized digital solutions that meet women and girls where they are, empowering them to be agents of change. Our team has experience working in some of the most challenging contexts globally with Medecins Sans Frontieres and as healthcare providers ourselves, we know that if women and girls are empowered with education and means to control their own fertility, they can be powerful agents of change. With the support of the OPTions Initiative through Grand Challenges Canada we were able build Vitala Global and co-create Aya Contigo with over 1000 Venezuelan women and girls and a dozen grassroots organizations through a rigorous human-centered design and research process. Aya Contigo is a digital companion that guides and supports users to self-manage their medical abortion and contraception needs bridging access and mental wellness by providing essential psychoemotional support. We launched Aya Contigo in March 2022. A key value of ours is to maintain feminist principles throughout our work, and thus we are committed to empowering local voices, and our team of 20 includes more than half who are Latinas themselves as well as young women. We have been part of the SCTG community for the last year and benefited from the vast network of partners and led a workshop in 2021 as part of the Self-Care Trailblazers Group’s Self-care Learning & Discovery Series.
Aya Contigo is a great example of a digital platform that assists women and girls to self-manage their medical abortions and contraceptive options. Can you speak more about this digital self-care solution, including the major successes and lessons learned from the project thus far?
Aya Contigo is a digital companion that supports Venezuelan women and girls to safely self-manage their medical abortion and contraceptive care journeys. Aya Contigo, referring to the word “Aya,” which in many languages carries the connotation of a caretaker, and “Contigo,” which is the Spanish term for “with you,” provides step-by-step guidance across continuum of care including self-assessment of eligibility for medical abortion, administration of medical abortion medicines, self-assessment of successful completion of abortion and post-abortion contraception. There is a virtual chat that is embedded within Aya Contigo where users are supported in real time by trained abortion accompaniers. In addition, Aya is embedded within the existing feminist ecosystem of Venezuela by serving as a gateway for Venezuelan women and girls to access information and to be supported in navigating the complex context surrounding abortion and contraception care, while the application also safeguards local grassroots organizations. Aya Contigo was officially launched in Venezuela March 2022 and has supported 2200+ users to date. Earlier this year, Aya Contigo was featured as 1 of 5 implementation stories through the World Health Organization’s IBP Network as an innovative abortion programme that is utilizing the WHO Abortion Care guidelines to provide comprehensive abortion care to women and girls living in challenging contexts. As per this implementation story, some key lessons we have learned are:
- Even in humanitarian contexts, it is possible to apply human-centered research and design thinking to inform the development and implementation of digital sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) solutions
- Particularly in complex humanitarian crisis situations where the health system is fragile, it is vital to work with local partners when designing and developing an abortion intervention
- Self-managed comprehensive abortion care cannot exist in a silo
What other project(s) is Vitala Global currently working on, and how are they uniquely leveraging technology to improve access to SRH services?
Through the support of Grand Challenges Canada, Vitala Global has received a Transition to Scale award so that we can scale Aya Contigo to Venezuelan youth between ages of 10 – 19. Currently we are undergoing a human-centered design methodology using Photovoice to explore the barriers and facilitators to sexual and reproductive health among young people living in Venezuela. Based on the results, we aim to co-design with youth any adaptations to the current solution. In the last year, we have also partnered with Profamilia in Colombia to support the co-design of a digital abortion self-care prototype, Mia, that is an extension of their current teleabortion service. We also consulted with International Planned Parenthood Global in supporting the development of their IMAP statement on Digital Health Interventions for Sexual and Reproductive Health. Finally, we are actively pursuing expansion of Aya Contigo in Latin America in countries such as Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras, and given the fall of Roe V Wade in the United States, we are exploring ways that Aya Contigo could be of user to Latina/x populations as a digital companion to support self-managed abortion.
Vitala Global’s work seeks to remove barriers to SRH services for women and girls. How do we ensure marginalized populations with limited access to certain technologies are included in the digital self-care movement?
In our experience, the key to successfully removing barriers to SRH services has been through building trust with local grassroots organizations. In addition, it is important to be agile and recognize that digital is not always the panacea. In certain contexts where technology is limited or where populations may not be very tech savvy, we must be creative in determining how we can still leverage technology. Often, this is achieved by having a local champion supporting a project who has access to tech to then assist in providing access to their local rural community and to ensure that external project leads truly listen to and learn from women and organizations within the community. It is important to not force digital onto every problem as THE solution, but instead to explore how we can leverage technology in a way that can be one avenue within a toolbox of tools to improve access to sexual and reproductive health.
Leading up to the UN’s High-Level Meeting on UHC in 2023, how can we best advocate for digital self-care as an integral part to achieving UHC for all?
What we have learned is that digital self-care solutions can be valuable to improve access to information and services, but they are not the panacea. As we continue to co-create solutions and expand our work throughout LATAM and beyond, to achieve UHC through digital self-care, particularly in challenging contexts where the health system is fragile, it is vital to work with local partners when designing and developing an SRH intervention. The development of a digital solution like Aya Contigo is a first step to bridge the gap between people’s needs and the supply of services in the formal health system. However, non-discriminatory access to quality comprehensive abortion care, using digital tools, to all who need it – including self-managed and facility-based abortion – requires that more factors are in place. This includes well functioning and supportive health systems, supported by laws and policies that promote and protect SRH and human rights. This is how we will truly achieve UHC for all.