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1.
African Journal of Reproductive Health ; 23(3): 96-105, 2019. ilus
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1258544

ABSTRACT

Since the 1990s some countries in Africa have experienced very rapid increases in contraceptive prevalence (e.g. Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda), while others (e.g. Nigeria) have seen little change. This study aims to shed light on the causes of these different trends which remain controversial. We assess the role of family planning programs vs. socioeconomic development (especially, women's educational attainment). Estimates of the effects of different explanatory factors are obtained by country level regressions in which the prevalence of modern contraception is the dependent variable and women's educational attainment,Gross National Income (GNI) per capita, percent urban and child mortality as well as the family planning program score are the independent variables. The statistical analysis finds no significant effects of GNI per capita, percent urban and child mortality. In contrast, women's educational attainment and program score have highly significant effects and are the dominant drivers of contraceptive prevalence trends. Voluntary family planning programs can increase contraceptive prevalence at all levels of female education. The best programs with prevalence impact above 30% (relative to no program effort) are found in Zimbabwe, Malawi, Kenya, Rwanda, Zambia and Ethiopia. Without family planning programs prevalence remains low even where education levels have risen substantially


Subject(s)
Africa South of the Sahara , Contraceptive Agents , Contraceptive Prevalence Surveys , Family Planning Services/education , Role
2.
African Journal of Reproductive Health ; 14(4): 133-145, 2010. ilus
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1258488

ABSTRACT

This paper reviews 44 National Adaptation Programmes of Action (NAPAs) to assess the NAPA process and identify the range of interventions included in countries' priority adaptation actions and highlight how population issues and reproductive health/family planning (RH/FP) are addressed as part of the adaptation agenda. A majority of the 44 NAPAs identify rapid population growth as a key component of vulnerability to climate change impacts. However, few chose to prioritise NAPA funds for family planning/reproductive health programmes. The paper emphasizes the need to translate the recognition of population pressure as a factor related to countries' ability to adapt to climate change into relevant project activities. Such projects should include access to RH/FP, in addition to other strategies such as girls education and women's empowerment that lead to lower fertility. Attention to population and integrated strategies should be central and aligned to longer-term national adaptation plans and strategies (Afr J Reprod Health 2010; 14[4]: 133-145)


Subject(s)
Africa , Climate Change , National Health Programs , Population , Reproductive Health , Reproductive Medicine , Women
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