Policies & Guidelines

© 1999 James F. Phillips, Courtesy of PhotoshareMany facets of health policy affect access to family planning services, including contraceptive pricing, security, funding, distribution, availability, and eligibility. In turn, access to quality family planning services and to a range of contraceptive options, including injectable contraceptives, affects a country profoundly by influencing the country’s rates of maternal and child morbidity and mortality; rates of mother-to-child transmission of HIV; gender equity and related social norms; and economic state. Despite the critical role of policy in meeting populations’ contraceptive needs, outdated health policies and guidelines, provider bias, and a lack of knowledge about current medical eligibility requirements for injectable contraceptive use are common barriers to contraceptive access in many parts of the world. 
 
Countries establish service delivery policies and guidelines on the provision and use of contraceptive methods to help programs and service providers provide contraceptives safely and effectively. The Policies & Guidelines section of the Injectables Toolkit provides the most recent international guidelines and recommendations from the World Health Organization related to family planning, including guidance specific to injectable contraceptives. Guidance documents from other international and national sources are also included. Programs can use these resources as a reference when periodically updating their own national guidelines.
 
Click on the links below to access tools and information on the following topics:
 
 
 
 
Have a suggested resource or comment about this section? Please email us at toolkits@k4health.org or visit our discussion board.
 

International Family Planning Guidance on Injectables

National Family Planning Guidance on Injectables

The following guidelines on injectables provide toolkit users with good, if not model, examples of country family planning guidelines. Additional national guidelines will be added as they become available.
    2010 | Ministry of Health and Sanitation, Division of Reproductive Health | 262 pp
    Produced by the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation’s Division of Reproductive Health in collaboration with a number of organizations and institutions, this updated edition of the Kenya family planning guidelines incorporates the 2009 Medical Eligibility Criteria (MEC) from the World Health Organization (WHO). Technical experts from EngenderHealth and FHI who reviewed these and other country guidelines found the Kenya guidelines to be the best model among all reviewed guidelines.

Guidance for Policy Making