1 / 27

African Family Planning Clinics

Integrating HIV/AIDS & Family Planning Services: Experiences From Sub-Saharan Africa Dr. Placide Tapsoba Dr. Naomi Rutenberg Repositioning Family Planning in West Africa Regional Conference, 15-18 February 2005 La Palm Royal Beach Hotel Accra, Ghana. African Family Planning Clinics. Busy

jereni
Télécharger la présentation

African Family Planning Clinics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Integrating HIV/AIDS & Family Planning Services: Experiences From Sub-Saharan AfricaDr. Placide Tapsoba Dr. Naomi RutenbergRepositioning Family Planning in West AfricaRegional Conference, 15-18 February 2005La Palm Royal Beach Hotel Accra, Ghana

  2. African Family Planning Clinics • Busy • Long waits • Short visits

  3. Reproductive Health challenge Dealing with unmet needs of RH in developing Countries: a huge task: • Over 120 million women have unmet need for FP • 350 million women lack access to full range of contraceptive methods • 120,000 HIV + women get pregnant each year • # of young people 10-24 yrs increased by 50% in 30 yrs • Between 1994 and 2015, 3 billion people will enter reproductive years • 500,000 women die a year from pregnancy related causes

  4. CPR remains low & unmet need high in most countries of Sub- Saharan Africa

  5. Both Unmet Contraceptive need and Adult HIV Prevalence are high

  6. HIV/AIDS Challenge • 40 million people worldwide; approx.70% in SSA • 14,000 new daily infections ( mainly through sexual contact) {UNAIDS} • Women and young people especially vulnerable • 50% new infections in 15-24 yr olds • 50% new infections among women • Annually 1.8 million infected pregnant women deliver approx 600,000 infected infants (UNICEF)

  7. Effect of unmet need and high HIV prevalence • Estimated 20 million women living with HIV • 25% of women with an unmet need for contraception • Therefore an estimated 5 million HIV positive women are in need of contraception

  8. What is integration? • “Arrangement for the provision of multiple but related services concurrently during a same visit” • Provider of one service actively encourages clients to use other services during the same visit. =>FP - HIV/AIDS (prevention and care)

  9. Why integrate? • FP and HIV/AIDS services are both elements of RH care for individuals & families health • FP is a key strategy in reducing vertical transmission of HIV • To maximize use of scarce financial & human resources, & respond to client needs by offering services to meet clients multiple needs • ‘…’

  10. How to integrate? • Policy / Advocacy • Providers’ framework and enabling environment • Programmatic • Provides clear direction of how • Service delivery • Institutional arrangements /community involvement & participation

  11. Types of integration • High integration • Services in the same physical location • Medium integration • Services in the same institution but different physical locations • Low integration • Services in different institutions but linked by arranged mechanism

  12. Integrating FP to HIV services;What do we know? • Integrating FP into VCT services • Integrating FP into care & support services • Integrating FP into PMTCT services

  13. Integrating FP to VCT services;Challenge • Add family Planning information, referral or method provision to VCT services • Re-position condom for family health • Concept of dual protection

  14. What to do? • Development of strategy • Advocacy for integration • Needs assessment of sites • Participatory planning • Capacity building • Supervision • M&E

  15. Method Mix by HIV status in 3 service delivery sites

  16. Integrating FP into PMTCTFP as standard component of most PMTCT services • FP counseling and education provided during antenatal care; FP counseling and methods offered postpartum • Stronger emphasis on FP within PMTCT programs where tubal ligation is common • Because most PMTCT programs have no/weak postnatal component, where methods are adopted later in postnatal period, PMTCT programs mainly refer to general FP services • Limited FP services at sites supported by some faith-based organizations

  17. % of pregnant women with at least one antenatal care visit WHO 1996

  18. PMTCT sites miss opportunities to provide FP counselingPercent who receive FP counseling, Lusaka, Zambia n=68 n=218 6mths postpartum n=981 Antenatal visit n=90 n=256 3 mths postpartum

  19. Percent using modern FP by HIV Status at 6 months postpartum

  20. HIV-positive women view condoms favorably • Offer protection against re-infection, STIs and unwanted pregnancy • Safe (particularly in low contraceptive prevalence areas, women had many fears of side effects of other contraceptive methods) • Cheap • Readily available • Promoted by PMTCT sites

  21. High sterilization rates in DR, Thailand and India • Almost all PMTCT clients are sterilized in DR, where HIV+ women are offered tubal ligation either in conjunction with a caesarean or following a vaginal birth • A study of HIV+ women from 37 hospital sites in Thailand found that 56% were sterilized at 6 weeks postpartum (Lallemant et al. 2004) • Providers in India report that sterilization is most popular method among HIV+ women

  22. Making family planning decisions IF you know your HIV status • This is a big IF • < 5% of adults know their HIV status • Many women still choose to get pregnant again

  23. Powerful motivations to have children; balance between family size having HIV-free children • Cement the marriage • Financial security • Expectations/norms of a pro-natalist society • Caring for children provides reason for living • Want to leave offspring to carry on name • Avoid partner’s suspicion of HIV infection—fear of abandonment • Hide HIV status from community, prevent stigma • Denial

  24. PMTCT program gives hope for having healthy children “Previously they used to fear producing because they knew it would lower their immunity and the child may be infected. But now with PMTCT awareness, that fear is gone. They now know there is a way of preventing mother-to-child transmission.” (Provider in Uganda)

  25. Integrating FP into PMTCT services • Advocacy with providers sought to clarify the concept of integration • Participatory planning to create consensus and prepare for the implementation of integration • Reorganization of services and reallocation and distribution of resources • Community component crucial

  26. Conclusion • Integrating FP/RH and HIV/AIDS programs have great benefits to providers and clients • Political will, commitment and change in orientation is required to ensure that integration happens • Challenges are inevitable but can be overcome • Integrating FP/RH and HIV/AIDS services is feasible in spite of HR and financial constraints.

  27. Publications of studies • Documents available on our website: http://www.popcouncil.org/horizonsfinalrpts.html or by e-mailL horizons@pcdc.org http://www.popcouncil.org/Frontiersfinalrpts.html or by e-mail: frontiers@pcdc.org http://advanceafrica.org

More Related