Population Council

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file icon The Balanced Counseling Strategy Plus: A Toolkit for Family Planning Service Providers Working in Hihot!Tooltip 12/04/2009 Hits: 269

The Balanced Counseling Strategy Plus (BCS) job aids and guides are intended for reproductive health programs interested in both strengthening the quality of family planning counseling and responding to the needs of clients at risk for STIs, especeially HIV.  The BCS User's Guide explains how to use the job aids and can be distributed during training on the BCS or used for self-teaching with the BCS job aids.The BCS is a developed and tested, practical, interactive, and client-friendly strategy for improving counseling within family planning consultations.  The BCS uses three key job aids for counseling clients about family planning; an algorithm to guide the provider through the counseling process, a set of counseling cards for contraceptive methods, and corresponding brochures for each method.  The strategy, tested and refined in several countries, compromises a series of steps to determine the contraceptive method that best suits the client according to her/his preferences and needs.  This strategy improves the quality of the provider's counseling and allows the client take ownership of the decision.  The approach is practical, low cost, and easy to adapt to local contexts.

file icon Introduction of Emergency Contraception in Bangladesh: Using Operations Research For Policy Decisionhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 233

The broad objective of the study is to assess the need for and acceptability of ECP by women in Bangladesh. Besides, special attention was paid to develop, test and document the operational plans for introducing emergency contraception pills as backup support to existing family planning methods. More specifically, the study intended to determine the acceptability and appropriate use of ECP among married women, identify the most appropriate and cost-effective service delivery model to make ECP accessible and test and document how best ECP could be introduced without adversely affecting the use of other family planning methods.

file icon Understanding Pregnancy-Related Morbidity and Mortality Among Young Women in Rajasthanhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 226

This report presents findings from an exploratory study of the pregnancy-related morbidity and mortality experiences of women who delivered in adolescence and adulthood, and the constraints they faced in seeking appropriate and timely care, in the state of Rajasthan.

file icon Technical Assistance for Implementing Best Practices in the Asia and Near East Regionhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 222

The overall objective of the study was to replicate and scale up „best practices‟ based on findings from FRONTIERS. The specific objectives of the study were: 1) To institutionalize the Systematic Screening Instrument in the entire state of Uttarakhand, India; 2) To strengthen Emergency Contraceptive Pills service provision in the entire state of Uttarakhand, India; and  3) To enhance use of the Lactational Amenorrhea Method (LAM) among Egyptian women. The present report has been divided into two parts. In the first part, implementation of the SSI and ECP activities has been presented jointly, as these activities were implemented together in Uttarakhand. The second part of the report describes activities implemented in Egypt to build national capacity regarding correct use of LAM and for providing postpartum and postabortion family planning.

file icon Making Pregnancy Safe for Women in Rajasthan: Targeting the Most Vulnerablehot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 222

This policy brief documents the magnitude of self-reported pregnancy-related morbidity among low-parity adolescent and adult women, and the constraints that they faced in seeking appropriate and timely care in Rajasthan. It also sheds light on the extent to which morbidity and the constraints experienced in seeking care differ across social classes.

file icon Implementation of Maternal Health Financial Scheme in Rural Bangladeshhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 216

This report describes an operations research (OR) study undertaken by the Population Council under the Demand Based Reproductive Health Commodity Project (DBRHCP) to examine the effect on utilization of maternal health care services, delivered by trained providers, through providing financial support directly to poor pregnant women through vouchers. Aiming to improve the quality of health service delivery, and particularly of reproductive health services, the National Institute of Population Research and Training (NIPORT) has implemented DBRHCP with four partners with financial assistance from the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and technical assistance from United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).

file icon Empowering Communities to Make Pregnancy Safer: An intervention in Rural Andhra Pradeshhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 215

This report is the result of a project entitled “Safe Motherhood through Community Mobilisation,” undertaken as part of the Health and Population Innovation Fellowship (HPIF) awarded to the author in 2004.

file icon Taking Critical Services to the Home: Lessons Learnt from a Community Midwifery Pilot Project in Kenhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 211

This aims to address the work force gap and build on resources available in the community, increase access to, and demand for, skilled attendants during pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period and for FP.  It also aims to operationalize the National Community Strategy to utilize human resources outside of the public health sector.

file icon Using Operations Research to Enhance Delivery of Postpartum/Postabortion Family Planning Services inhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 207

This article was meant to cover a workshop whose objectives were: To increase understanding of the importance of integrating postpartum/postabortion care with family planning services, in efforts to improve the health of mothers and children in the Arab region; To share best and promising practices in providing family planning services, especially those within postpartum and postabortion care;  To orient participants in adapting best and promising practices in their own programs through practical sessions and working groups;  To recognize the role of operations research in enhancing the integration of family planning services with postpartum/postabortion care.

file icon Assessing Integration Methodology: A Handbook for Measuring and Assessing the Integration of Family hot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 207

This handbook presents a methodology that seeks to address a knowledge gap. Termed the Assessing Integration Methodology, or AIM, it has been developed from experience gained by the Population Council in undertaking assessments of various combinations of integrated services in many developing countries, most of which was undertaken through the USAID-funded Frontiers in integrated services. The handbook (a) explains the basic principles of conducting studies using AIM, (b) provides tips for the data collection, and (c) makes available data collection instruments that have been validated in projects throughout the developing world. The map on the previous page highlights those countries in which FRONTIERS carried out projects utilizing the AIM strategy.

file icon The Impact of Quality of Care on Contraceptive Use: Evidence from Longitudinal Data from Rural Banglhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 203

This project was intended to address this gap through analysis of a unique longitudinal data set from rural Bangladesh. Using prospective data from approximately 7,000 reproductive-aged Bangladeshi women, the objective of this study was to evaluate the relative impact of service quality and client characteristics on contraceptive adoption and method continuation. The study employed new, more methodologically rigorous analytical approaches— specifically, multi-level analysis— and measures of fieldworker and clinic service access and quality, which are largely free from the biases of endogeneity (i.e. the inter-correlation of key variables) and unobserved heterogeneity which characterize many existing analyses of this issue. The results provide new and persuasive empirical evidence on the importance of service quality for contraceptive behavior.

file icon Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of (recently) Pregnant HIV-Infected Women in Mexicohot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 199

This study is meant to explore sexual and reproductive health (SRH) experiences and needs of women living with HIV/AIDs in Mexico.  It was also meant to give recommendations to improve SRH and HIV services for women.

file icon Effects and Cost of Implementing a Gender-Sensitive Reproductive Health Programhot!Tooltip 12/04/2009 Hits: 194

The Integral Health Coordination Program (Programa de Coordinación en Salud Integral or PROCOSI) is a network of 24 Bolivian NGOs that coordinates and implements programs to improve the health of the population in need. In 2000, PROCOSI received funding from the USAID Mission in Bolivia to institutionalize a gender perspective in the reproductive and sexual health services offered by the PROCOSI network.  PROCOSI and the Population Council’s Frontiers in Reproductive Health Program (FRONTIERS) took advantage of this opportunity to evaluate the effects that interventions had on clinic clients and their partners, and to estimate the costs of incorporating a gender perspective into service delivery.  The project aimed to answer four questions: 1) Can health organizations operationalize a gender perspective? 2) Does the incorporation of a gender perspective have a positive effect on the health and well being of the users and on their relationships with their partners? 3) Does this have an effect on the demand for sexual and reproductive health services? 4) Which would be the cost of incorporating a gender perspective into the delivery of reproductive health services?

file icon Enhancing Quality for Clients The Balanced Counseling Strategyhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 191

This Program Brief describes the balanced counseling strategy as an ongoing approach to improving quality of care. It outlines the origin and rationale for developing the strategy, and details its subsequent adaptation for use in other contexts.

file icon Improving Quality of Care and Use of Contraceptives in Senegalhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 187

In the 1990s, the government of Senegal implemented a series of policy changes for the provision of family planning services through the public sector. A strategy to provide high quality services through reference centers was adopted. This paper presents findings from a longitudinal survey of 1,320 Senegalese women who had sought family planning services at ten public sector facilities - five reference centers and five health centers. Information was collected on the quality of care they received at the time they adopted family planning. One thousand one hundred and ten of the respondents were followed up sixteen months later to ascertain their contraceptive status. The first principal finding was that attendees at reference centers reported receiving relative better care than those who attended health centers. On average, clients at reference centers received 4.3 out of five units of care, compared to 3.8 units as reported by health centre clients. Second, multivariate analyses indicated that quality of care received at the time of adopting a contraceptive has a significant influence on subsequent contraceptive use. Those who received good care were 1.3 times more likely to be using a method than others.

file icon Introducing Sustainable Vasectomy Services in Guatemalahot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 183

This article shows how sustainable vasectomies are better suited in Guatemala.  From a public health perspective, it would be desirable for a greater proportion of couples to adopt vasectomy rather than female sterilization. Vasectomy has a lower rate of postoperative complications than female sterilization, and the client’s recovery time is shorter; it is also a less expensive procedure for the providing institution. Furthermore, vasectomy is the only long-term method that men can use to achieve their fertility ideals, and it allows for direct male involvement in reproductive decision making.

file icon Introduction of Emergency Contraceptive Pills in the Public Health System of Pakistan: A South-to-Sohot!Tooltip 01/12/2010 Hits: 178

This report describes a south-to-south collaboration to assist the Ministry of Health of Pakistan to introduce emergency contraception (EC) into its family planning program, supported by the Population Council’s USAID-funded Frontiers in Reproductive Health (FRONTIERS) program. The collaboration consisted of a three-day visit by senior managers from the Pakistani health authorities to Bangladesh to familiarize them with the EC program in that country, followed by a two-day consultative meeting in Islamabad, Pakistan to draw up concrete plans for introduction of the method into the Pakistan system.

file icon A Comparison of the Performance of Male and Female CBD Distributors in Peruhot!Tooltip 12/02/2009 Hits: 174

This report presents the results of an operations research project to increase male involvement in family planning in Peru.  The study suggests that family planning programs can influence method mix and client characteristics by recruiting men as CBD distributors.

file icon Traditional Birth Attendants in Maternal Health Programmeshot!Tooltip 01/12/2010 Hits: 164

Despite the tremendous resources invested in training Traditional Birth Attendants (TBA) over the past two decades, scientific evidence from around the world has shown that training TBAs has not reduced maternal mortality. Any improvement observed when TBA training programmes have been introduced was because of the associated supervision and referral systems, and because of the quality of essential obstetric services available at first referral level.  Since TBAs are highly regarded by their communities, it is critical that they still be encouraged and enabled to play a role in improving maternal health. The Kenya Safe Motherhood Demonstration Project (SMDP) has identified the contributions that TBAs can make, so that they are incorporated into a national plan for maternal and neonatal health during the transition to Skilled Attendance at birth.

file icon Improving Quality of Care for Family Planning Services in Ugandahot!Tooltip 01/12/2010 Hits: 160

The Regional Centre for Quality of Health Care at Makerere University, in collaboration with the Delivery of Improved Services for Health II (DISH II) Project, the Ministry of Health of Uganda, and the Population Council’s FRONTIERS Program, conducted an Operations Research project to help the Ministry of Health improve the quality of family planning services with the aim of helping couples better attain their reproductive goals. The study developed a package of interventions that sought to increase the readiness of clinics to offer basic family planning services, to improve provider motivation, and to empower clients to request quality services. The project then tested the feasibility of implementing these interventions, and evaluated their effect on the quality of client-provider interactions.

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