Pos or Not?

Recently I was introduced to a fabulous new tool designed to combat HIV/AIDS related stigma.  “Pos-or-not” sponsored by MTV Networks is a game of sorts that allows user to decide if a man or woman is HIV+ based solely upon his or her looks and a brief description of their personality.  The site was designed to show individuals that there is no way an someone can tell if an inidividual is HIV positive or not based upon their looks.  The site was based upon the “Hot or Not” site, where users decide if a picture of someone presented is hot or “not” (hot).

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“Two children per family — a chance for a better life”

nullEgypt’s Health Minister Hatem el-Gabali announced an $80 million USD family planning campaign last week with the slogan “two children per family - a chance for a better life.” Since Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has come to power he has urged Egyptian families to plan their families and have fewer children.

Mubarak has stated that at current growth rates the population of Egypt will double by the year 2050 in the absence of increased uptake of family planning. Egypt is the 16th most populous country in the world, according to the CIA.

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Emergency Contraception–The Best and the Rest

The Cochrane Review

Laili Irani, a program specialist at the INFO Project, was recently tasked with researching new findings in reproductive health that came out since the publication of Family Planning: A Global Handbook for Providers. After going through hundreds of pages of research she had this to say about a recently released literature synthesis from the Cochrane Review.

One of the best sythesis I found on emergency contraception–a hot topic in reproductive health–was the recently published literature review from the Cochrane Review.

The review showed that mifepristone and levonorgestrel are very effective methods of emergency contraception with few adverse effects. Emergency contraception (EC) is a method of preventing pregnancy after unprotected sex. 81 randomized controlled clinical trials with 45,842 women were included in the Cochrane Review summary, with most trials conducted in China (70 out of 81 studies). The report notes that copper intrauterine devices can also be used 5 days after unprotected intercourse to prevent pregnancy , along with providing ongoing protection against future pregnancy if left in place. Read the rest of this entry »

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Fording Rivers, Crossing Mountains–Family Planning Heroes

A young mother in a rural village near Jodhpur, India, holds her child, as a community based social worker with the Veerni Project looks on. Courtesy of Photoshare.If there’s ever a Mount Rushmore memorial built to honor heroes of family planning, the granite rock faces should be chisled with the features of community health workers like the women in pink, at left.

This woman, who works in a remote village in Rajasthan, India, promotes the use of family planning, educates families about HIV/AIDS, and encourages girls to go to school. The Veerni Project, a women’s empowerment group, trained her and other mostly-volunteer ”promoters” in each village.

I was reminded of these brave women, whose energetic work I observed while working with the Veerni Project a few years ago, in doing research for the upcoming issue of Population Reports, Elements of Successful Family Planning Programs. One key element of many successful programs? A mix of contraceptive service delivery points, facilitated by community agents like Veerni’s promoters.

In the case of CARE’s Extra Mile Initiative (EMI), which took place in eastern Madagascar–dubbed “the eight continent” for its rich biodiversity–community health agents overcame obstacles including flooded rivers and roadless districts to teach community members about methods to space their childrens’ births and limit family size. They were also tasked with training health center staff and local politicians. According to the Case Study, “the project’s very name indicated the additional effort CARE would need to invest just to reach the six communes–by motocycle, canoe and, mostly, on foot.” Luckily, the agents were cheerfully good-humored about the challenges, recounting storise like Mr. Boutobé’s:

In roadless Ambahoabe commune… the SDC [Social Development Committee] organized residents of the commune seat to smooth out nearly five miles of trail so that field agent Sebastian Boutobé could reach them by motorcycle, rather than on foot… “[My motorcycle] made such an impression,” [Sebastian] says, “that some people named their babies Sebastian in honor of the event.”

Others crossed flooded rivers, like Mac Samuel, who remembered at one point, while he was trying to reach a remote area, ”we were up to our necks.”
Read the rest of this entry »

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Demand for Family Planning to Rise

Source: Donna Clifton, Toshiko Kaneda, and Lori Ashford, Family Planning Worldwide 2008

An article in Ghana’s Public Agenda drew our attention today to a report from Population Reference Bureau (PRB) showing that demand for family planning services is growing around the world.

According to Toshiko Kaneda, co-author of the new data sheet Family Planning Worldwide, the increase is due to two key trends: the huge numbers of young people entering childbearing age in the developing world, and the increasing adoption of contraceptive use. Read the rest of this entry »

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