Country/Regional Experience

For the past two decades , PHE approaches have been tested in several developing countries, including East Africa, Ethiopia, Madagascar, Nepal, the Philippines. These country and regional PHE experiences offer a wealth of rich, detailed information on how PHE projects began and were carried out. The results and impacts of pilot efforts lead to taking on, policy challenges and strategies for scaling up from community level to broader national levels. Materials from countries and regions included here offer lessons and results from past programs and projects featuring PHE. For details on specific ongoing projects, see the Current PHE Programs tab.

Population Reference Bureau (PRB) created the interactive Population, Health, and Environment (PHE) Project Map in Google Maps to highlight the diverse efforts of organizations to integrate components of population and reproductive health services with environmental projects and programs. The goal of many of these programs is to meet the health and livelihood needs of remote or underserved populations while ensuring the sustainability of the environment upon which they depend. The map aims to give viewers both a sense of the scale of current PHE integration efforts and specific information about individual organizations, projects, and their location.


View Population, Health, and Environment (PHE) Project Map in a larger map

2008 | United States Agency for International Development [USAID] | 31
The global PHE community consists of organizations and individuals with a wealth of knowledge and hands-on experience in PHE policy advocacy, operations research and program design and execution. This document provides detailed information on 15 specific past projects involving PHE approaches including links to project web sites. Each project description explains the development challenge, the approach taken, and the activities undertaken.
1999 | Population Action International | pp. 60
This document is a follow up to Plan and Conserve, which inventoried 42 community-based population and environment projects. Forging the Links contains 15 additional project profiles as well as an assessment of the evidence and evaluation of CBPE approaches. The conclusions show that most evidence is anecdotal but that there are several reasons to continue linking family planning and conservation.
1998 | Population Action International | pp. 112
Plan and Conserve profiles 42 projects that PAI was able to document that combined family planning and reproductive health services with natural resource conservation to improve access to family planning services. Project profiles span the globe including Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Middle East, and include NGOs such as World Neighbors, CARE and CEMOPLAF in Guatemala and Ecuador.

Asia: General

    2010 | BALANCED Project | 23
    The Fall 2010 issue of the BALANCED Newsletter examines the links between PHE approaches and climate change mitigation and adaptation, because of the increasing global and national attention on the growing threat of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the impacts of climate change on communities, and interventions to address these impacts.
    2008 | Conservation International | pp. 16
    From a range of interviews, observations, and desk reviews of documents this publication presents lessons learned from Conservation International (CI) and Cooperative for Assistance Relief Everywhere (CARE)’s health care and conservation initiative in the Cardamom Mountains Region of Cambodia. The primary focus is on elements of CI’s Population Health Environment (PHE) interventions involving reproductive health/family planning activities and conservation.
    2008 | Conservation International | 36
    Population, Health, and Environment(PHE) integrated projects are a part of this new generation. These projects not only aim to achieve goals in these fields, but to better understand the effects of these integrated approaches. Conservation International (CI) combined their extensive experience designing and implementing conservation projects, with the new understanding of the effects of integrated projects to create more valuable PHE projects. The idea in these projects was to reduce population pressures on biodiversity hotspots.
    2007 | International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) | pp. 242
    For the 640 million rural Asians living in poverty, ecosystems and natural resources are the livelihoods they depend on. These are also the people who are most affected when these ecosystems degrade, and least able to rebuild their lives when natural disasters strike. The case studies presented in this publication highlight the challenges faced by these poor and, often, resource-dependent households across Asia. Some case studies focus on the complex linkages between gender, poverty, and environment, and others on how human-ecosystem interactions can lead to the spread of disease.

Asia: Nepal

Asia: Philippines

East Africa Region

    2011 | BALANCED Project | 2
    Mrs. Jeanne Nyirakamana serves as the Head of the Health Program in rural Rwanda advancing PHE efforts for the USAID-supported "Sustaining Partnerships to Enhance Rural Enterprise and Agribusiness Development" (SPREAD) Project. She and her outreach team help improve the lives of coffee farmers and cooperative members by providing them with health information and services related to family planning, maternal and child health, prevention of HIV/AIDS and water and sanitation. Read more about Jeanne's work in her PHE champion story.
    2011 | BALANCED Project | 2
    Mr. Sam Rugaba is community conservation health worker in Uganda, where he promotes childhood education and encourages family planning in order to help communities protect natural resources. Sam's community selected him to represent them in the Conservation though Public Health (CTPH) Population, Health and Environment program because of his respect in the community, his trustworthiness, and his good communication skills. Please read more about Sam in this PHE Champion profile.
    2011 | BALANCED Project | 2
    Mrs. Ruth Siyage is a Population, Health and Enviroment (PHE) champion, promoting family planning and livelihoods for a healthy environment in Uganda.  She works with the Conservation through Public Health (CTPH) near the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park (BINP) in Uganda's Kishande village, in the Bujengwe Parish, Kanungu District. For more information, please read her story in this PHE Champion profile.
    2011 | BALANCED Project | 2
    Rukia Seif is a population, health, environment (PHE) peer educator who promotes simple economic, environmental, and health behaviors that make sense. In many ways, the Mkalamo village where Rukia lives is a typical rural Tanzanian agricultural village. In another important way it is very different. Mkalamo abuts the biodiversity rich Saadani National Park—the only wildlife park in Tanzania that borders the sea. This PHE champions story describes how she implements PHE approaches to help her community improve health and environmental conditions.
    2010 | Public Health Institute | 48
    The overall goal of the SPREAD Project (2006-2011) is “to provide rural cooperatives and enterprises involved in high-value commodity chains with appropriate technical assistance and access to health-related services and information that will result in increased and sustained incomes and improved livelihoods.” Implemented by USAID and the Texas A&M University Norman Borlaug Institute of International Agriculture, SPREAD is a unique example of integrated programming within USAID, a “wraparound” project that receives funding across several technical areas in Health
    2011 | Pathfinder International | 8
    Since the beginning of 2011, Pathfinder International has been working together with The Nature Conservancy and the Frankfurt Zoological Society to design a project that reduces pressures on the diverse and fragile Greater Mahale Ecosystem in western Tanzania by Lake Tanganyika.  As a health partner invited in
    2011 | University of Rhode Island Coastal Resources Center | 16
    The Summer 2011 issue of the BALANCED Newsletter examines the link between PHE approaches and livelihoods.  In recognition of the need and/or the "fit" for PHE projects to address a wider array of real life topics this issue of the BALANCED newsletter includes four articles that focus on the topic of PHE and livelihoods.  The articles describe how livelihoods have been integrated into environmental conservation in Zambia, Ethiopia, and Madagascar.
    2011 | The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars | 12
    This issue of FOCUS highlights the successes and lessons learned from the USAID-supported Sustaining Partnerships to Enhance Rural Development (SPREAD) Project in Rwanda. In the most densely populated country in Africa, coffee farmers are improving their livelihoods and the health of their families by combining community health education with agribusiness development by forming and strengthening cooperatives. Since 2006, this Population, Health and Environment project has increased farmer revenues and improved family health outcomes in the target communities.
    2011 | University of Rhode Island Coastal Resources Center | 16
    This presentation by staff from the Tanzania Coastal Management Partnership provides an overview of the USAID-funded PWANI project in northeastern Tanzania. The project has integrated HIV/AIDS and coastal resources management in fishing communities through training, capacity building and community outrach. HIV/AIDS activities have focused on the need to understand and mitigate the impacts of HIV/AIDS on biodiversity, as well as promoting HIV prevention messages. PHE integration efforts in the Pwani project are also mentioned at the end of the presention.
    2011 | Organization for Conservation of Natural Resources and the Combat of HIV/AIDS (OCRA) | 13
    Dr. Dwasi delivered this presentation as part of the June 2011 Society for Conservation Biology panel on HIV/AIDS and the environment. The presentation raises awareness about the negative impacts of HIV/AIDS on the management and conservation of natural resources in sub-Saharan Africa; shares findings on complex and critical linkages between biodiversity and HIV/AIDS; and provides examples of good community biodiversity response strategies and practitioner experiences.
    2011 | The BALANCED Project | 2
      Mr. Pascal Gakwaya Kalisa has produced coffee in the densely-populated country of Rwanda for the past nine years. He also helps promote improved health practices among the coffee farmer cooperatives and community members in one of the world's most densly-popuated countries. Read more about his efforts as a PHE champion.
    2011 | University of Rhode Island Coastal Resources Center | 35
    This study summarizes the results of a behavioral monitoring survey (BMS) conducted in Tanzania in June 2009. The study was co-sponsored by the “Building Actors and Leaders for Advancing Community Excellence in Development” (BALANCED) Project and the Sustainable Coastal Communities and Ecosystems (SUCCESS) Project. Both projects are funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
    2010 | BALANCED Project | 2
    Abdalah Masingano is a PHE Provider near Saandani National Park in eastern Tanzania. This profile describes his community outreach efforts to increase access to family planning and reproductive health while increasing awareness of improved environmental practices.
    2010 | BALANCED Project | 23
    The Fall 2010 issue of the BALANCED Newsletter examines the links between PHE approaches and climate change mitigation and adaptation, because of the increasing global and national attention on the growing threat of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the impacts of climate change on communities, and interventions to address these impacts.
    2010 | World Conservation Society Zambia
        The BALANCED Project is working with Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) Zambia to integrate family planning and health into their very successful Community Markets for Conservation (COMACO) Initiative. In this issue of   COMACOs exciting newsletter, please look for the BALANCED team member article, "COMACO Takes Farmer Training to Another Level" under Farm and Land Use.  
    2010 | PATH Outlook Newsletter | 8
    This issue of Outlook examines the relationships between family planning and the environment, including key lessons learned from integrated or linked family planning and conservation interventions. The author targets family planning practitioners who are seeking new ways of reframing a fundamental issue - how family planning and the environment relate within the context of well-being and promoting social equity.
    2010 | Ethiopia's PHE Spotlight
    Following the November 2007 conference, Population, Health and Environment (PHE): Integrated Development for East Africa in Addis Ababa, there had been an outcry for PHE integration throughout Ethiopia. The context for applying an integrated approach toward improved livelihoods is clear, considering Ethiopia’s vast deforestation, land degradation, rapidly growing population, high rates of unmet need for family planning and maternal mortality challenges, not to mention how climate change will exacerbate them.
    2010 | John Snow | 58
    This report documents the process through which a Ugandan conservation organization,Conservation through Public Health (CTPH), successfully integrated interventions -traditionally seen as from different “domains” or “sectors”—for the dual purposes of i) reducing threats to mountain gorillas and their habitat and ii) improving the well-being of local communitiesdirectly dependent upon the health of the former (for ecotourism and natural resourceuse). John Snow Inc. (JSI), with the U.S.
    2010 | BALANCED Project | 2
    In the forests of the Democractic Republic of Congo, Albert Lotana Lokasola is helping to improve human health and conservation in the Kokolopuri Bonobo Reserve. This profile describes his efforts to increase health services for community members in this remote, criticallly important biodiveristy area.
    2009 | Population Reference Bureau [PRB] | pp. 12
    The Population Reference Bureau coordinated a comparative study of population, health, and environment integration and cross-sectoral collaboration in East Africa.
    2008 | Focus on Population
    On the outskirts of remote Bwindi Impenetrable National Park (BINP) in southwestern Uganda, endan¬gered mountain gorillas forage in local gardens that run along the border of the park. Rapid population growth has pushed people to settle near the gorillas’ habitat— sometimes leading to conflict. Our innovative com¬munity development program, Conservation Through Public Health, seeks to conserve these magnificent ani¬mals, and at the same time, improve the quality of life for Ugandans living near Bwindi.
    2007 | Population Reference Bureau [PRB] | pp. 12
    The Population Reference Bureau coordinated a comparative study of population, health, and environment integration and cross-sectoral collaboration in East Africa.
    2007 | Population Reference Bureau [PRB]
    Because Kenya faces challenges in all sectors: endemic poverty, continual deforestation, and high infant mortality rate, it seems a natural for cross-sectoral development work. But frequently development organizations focus on single sector work. An assessment of the overall “state of integration” has not been taken recently to encourage or demonstrate the benefits of an integrated approach. The integrated population-health-environment (PHE) approach to development recognizes the interconnectedness between people and their environment.
    2007 | Population Reference Bureau [PRB] | pp. 8
    Kenya has continually faced challenges in all sectors: endemic poverty, persistent deforestation, and a high infant mortality rate. After a number of integrated population, health, and environment (PHE) projects initiated in Kenya, The University of Nairobi and the National Coordinating Agency for Population and Development conducted an assessment of the overall “state of integration” between 2006 and 2007. This study drew the links between population, health, and environment integration so that they could be evaluated.
    2007 | Population Reference Bureau [PRB]
    When conserving the environment the number of people, where they live, and how they live can have a great affect on the health of the ecoregion. Rural poverty and a high population growth rate not only alter the environment, but can pose challenges for policy makers. The population-health-environment (PHE) approach to development acknowledges the interconnectedness between people and their environment. Opportunities and challenges of integrated programming were explored by the Institute of Resource Assessment at the University of Dar es Salaam.
    2007 | Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
    In Ethiopia’s history its potent combination of high population growth, unsustainable land use, and ambiguous land ownership policies has led to the rapid loss of biomass and increase in soil erosion and desertification. Such environmental issues, intensified by climate change, have led to drought, famine, and population displacement. The Ethiopian government, donor agencies, community based organizations, and NGOs have made significant changes in the country, but many development practitioners fail to recognize the interdependence of population and environment issues.
    2006 | Ocean & Coastal Management Vol. 49 | pp. 792-811
    This paper summarizes a field study on the linkages between AIDS and coastal biodiversity in eight coastal villages in the Bagamoyo and Pangani Districts in Tanzania. Summarizing the current literature, we suggest that there are three categories of direct impacts of AIDS on natural resources—accelerated rate of resources extraction, decreased availability of labor and management capacity,
    2006 | Environmental Change and Security Program
     This Focus issue highlights Jane Goodall’s experience in chimpanzee conservation in Tanzania and the current PHE efforts of the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI) as part of the Congo Basin Forest Partnership, supported by the US State Department with matching funds from the European Union. The Lake Tanganyika Catchment Reforestation and Education (TACARE) project began in 1994 in 12 villages in Tanzania.
    2004 | Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
    Drought, famine, and poverty have plagued Ethiopia through much of its history. Population growth has been one the most critical drivers in many of the country’s problems. Social infrastructure and agricultural land have proven to be unfit to keep up with the population’s growing numbers. Ethiopia’s health infrastructure is not keeping pace with the population growth, and the HIV/AIDS pandemic is now a public health problem. This population also contributes to environmental degradation, especially in the highly population highlands.
    2002 | Population & Environment Vol. 28 No. 4-5 | pp. 267-273
    Community-based distribution (CBD) programs present an alternative way of effectively reaching people in rural areas of developing countries where conventional methods of delivery do not exist or fail. This paper reviews the experience and findings from the Jane Goodall Institute’s (JGI) TACARE program in the Kigoma region of Tanzania. It focuses on the family planning CBD program and its integration within the TACARE program to meet the broader mission of JGI’s conservation efforts.
    2001 | Biodiversity Conservation 10 | pp. 1011-1026
    Small reserves are especially likely to lose species. Is that because the reserves are small,
    Population Reference Bureau [PRB]
    After decades of instability and civil conflict, Uganda has enjoyed relative stability, sustained economic growth, and great improvements in health over the last 20 years. During the same period, Uganda's population has grown rapidly, and in 2009 surpassed 30 million people. This rapid population growth is contributing to the degradation of Uganda's natural resources, the backbone of the country's economy and household livelihoods.
    Population Action International
    The effects of global climate change are being felt disproportionately in the world’s poorest countries, where the people are the least able to cope. As climate change adaption strategies are gaining international attention, it is important to show how people are coping with the effects of climate change, how they could become more resilient to these effects and how people and communities can adapt to changes in climate.

West Africa Region

    2011 | University of Rhode Island Coastal Resources Center | 16
    The Summer 2011 issue of the BALANCED Newsletter examines the link between PHE approaches and livelihoods.  In recognition of the need and/or the "fit" for PHE projects to address a wider array of real life topics this issue of the BALANCED newsletter includes four articles that focus on the topic of PHE and livelihoods.  The articles describe how livelihoods have been integrated into environmental conservation in Zambia, Ethiopia, and Madagascar.
    1999 | Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars | pp. 28
    Secondary cities in today’s West Africa were rural villages thirty years ago, so their housing, water, sanitation, and public health infrastructures are often very poor or nonexistent. Addressing issues of secondary cities requires new vision, policies, and approaches. Governments must work with local and traditional management systems and structures already in place. This paper describes the concept of environmental health and the related preconditions for disease prevention in secondary cities.

Madagascar

Latin America Region