Family Planning

  • Blog post

    Over the last year I worked with my USAID colleague, Shawn Malarcher, and with an outstanding intern who is currently an MSPH candidate at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Selam Desta, to develop a guide to tools and resources to support family planning programming and advocacy in the field. Selam interviewed USAID health officers based in the field and Washington-based staff who regularly provide technical assistance to field programs to find out what they felt were their primary needs for information and resources related to family planning.  She also identified a number of possible resources, reviewed each of them and organized them into this guide, which we have titled USAID Resource Guide for Family Planning.  

    --Peggy D'Adamo

    We had heard from our staff in the field and from our partners that field-based staff has information needs that are often time-bound and urgent while, at the same time, they have little time for research or synthesis.  In addition, many of them find it hard to keep up-to-date with the tremendous amount of information, tools, and resources that are currently available.  We also learned that there is a broad spectrum of technical understanding of family planning among some of USAID field staff, and that they may not necessarily be familiar with the standard resources that those of us working in this field for years take for granted.  We also knew that field staff needs access to some specialized information and resources related to program design and to family planning compliance, which is often difficult to find on the USAID website or Intranet.  So, we developed this guide in two versions – one directly targeting our own mission-based staff and another with more general resources.  The guide posted here on the K4Health site is the more general version.  I’m delighted to share it with K4Health’s audience now.

  • Blog post

    This blog was originally posted on Impatient Optimists on January 8, 2013. Authors Holly Blanchard, Senior Reproductive Health Family Planning Advisor, and Elizabeth Sasser, Senior Program Coordinator, work with Jhpiego in the Maternal and Child Health Integrated Program (MCHIP)For both mothers and infants, there are many benefits to preventing another pregnancy for at least two years after a previous birth. In this blog, they talk about the opportunity to introduce modern family planning methods immediately after delivery, such as the postpartum intrauterine contraceptive device (PPIUCD). 

    This year, 222 million women worldwide will have an unmet need for modern contraception. And as more women are encouraged to deliver in facilities, there is greater opportunity for immediate postpartum  intrauterine contraceptive device (IUCD) services. 

    Abdela Abdosh, a midwife working in Ethiopia, can offer a testament of what this service can mean in a woman’s life. He tells the story of 30-year old Shumba Berisso, a mother who arrived at an MCHIP-supported facility in Ethiopia in labor with her eighth baby. After the delivery, she turned her head away from her newborn and sobbed silently, saying she had no means to care for the baby.

    “If only I could have prevented this pregnancy,” Shumba lamented, adding that her other seven children had never set foot in a classroom, instead spending their days toiling on neighboring farms.

  • Blog post

    As the world’s eyes turn towards sexual and reproductive health ahead of July’s major Family Planning Summit, experts from Marie Stopes International revealed Impact 2 today, an updated tool which allows organisations to estimate the high level impact of their sexual and reproductive health services in less developed countries*.

    Presented to experts throughout the sexual and reproductive health sector at the Wellcome Trust in London, this innovative tool is the solution to a problem that many family planning organisations face – namely, the difficulty of demonstrating high level outcomes such as maternal lives saved, without having to use expensive surveys and complex mathematical modelling themselves.