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Sadia A Chowdhury The World Bank May 26, 2010 The World Bank’s Reproductive Health Action Plan 2010-2015 9/5/20151.

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Presentation on theme: "Sadia A Chowdhury The World Bank May 26, 2010 The World Bank’s Reproductive Health Action Plan 2010-2015 9/5/20151."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sadia A Chowdhury The World Bank May 26, 2010 The World Bank’s Reproductive Health Action Plan 2010-2015 9/5/20151

2 The World Bank has a long history of engagement in population and reproductive health  In 1970 the Bank gave its first health sector loan to Jamaica for family planning (US$ 2m)  In the past 10 years, the Bank has committed over US$ 1 billion for population and reproductive health  The Bank’s policy on population and reproductive health has evolved over time 1970-79: Focus on population 1980-86: Focus on primary health care; population still priority; nutrition gains importance 1987-96: Focus on health reforms; Bank’s population agenda becomes more comprehensive in response to ICPD 1994 1997-06:Bank’s work remains guided by ICPD 1994; focus on high fertility, low income countries; policy dialogue promoted The 2007 HNP strategy re-affirms Bank’s commitment to ICPD 1994, and places emphasis on comprehensive package of services through health systems 9/5/20152

3 We know that progress on MDG 5 has been slow  The maternal mortality ratio in developing countries is 450/100,000 live births on average versus 9/100,000 in developed countries.  Fourteen countries – thirteen of which are in sub-Saharan Africa have maternal mortality rates in excess of 1000 per live births  Although the fertility rate in developing countries declined from 6 to 2.6 during 1960-2006, there are still 28 countries with TFR>5, mainly in Sub-Saharan Africa  Within countries there are significant variations in fertility rates by level of income, e.g. India, Colombia, Namibia  Under 25 population accounts for over 100 million STIs annually, other than HIV and 60% of unsafe abortions in Sub-Saharan Africa, yet their RH needs are not adequately addressed 9/5/20153

4 Technical solutions are well-known, but not well implemented  Access to modern contraceptives and the ability to plan families is the first step in avoiding maternal deaths…  Yet less than half the demand for family planning is being met. Only 24% of the need is met in sub-Saharan Africa.  This is indicative of poor logistics and planning that often cause supply shortages.  Since complications are not predictable, all women need care from skilled health professionals during pregnancy, childbirth and in weeks after delivery…  Yet, a third of pregnant women do not receive care from skilled birth attendants during childbirth.  This is indicative to poor access to facilities and properly trained health workers. Health worker shortages are most acute in Africa. … and demand for services remains low for the poorest households due to poor access and prohibitive costs. 9/5/2015 4

5 Sustained political commitment and leadership is vital  At the national and local levels, the quality of overall governance directly affects the environment in which health systems operate and the ability of government health officials to exercise their responsibilities.  Government effectiveness countries in the High MMR-High TFR group rank consistently lower than other groups of countries  At the global level, despite a growing shared understanding on the solution set (Global Consensus), the issue has yet to be framed in a way to generate political commitment and subsequent action.  This is reflected in the ODA flows - we are not spending what we should and where we should. 9/5/20155

6 ODA for Reproductive Health (1995-2008) 9/5/20156

7 We need to address these implementation constraints at various levels  At the community and household level (e.g., increasing the demand for services and removing financial and geographic barriers to maternal health services);  Health-services delivery level (e.g., effective human resource management to ensure health personnel attend to deliveries; upgrading and equipping health facilities; strengthening health management information systems for monitoring and evaluation);  Health-sector policy and strategic management level (e.g., strategic public-private partnerships to ensure universal access to health services);  In public policies cutting across sectors (e.g., promoting education of girls, expand road networks and making available affordable transport);  Addressing fragmentation of donor efforts and financing (e.g., harmonizing and coordinating the efforts of donors at country level to support countries to improve maternal health). 9/5/20157

8 The Reproductive Health Action Plan leverages the Bank’s focus in 5 areas…  Countries with high maternal mortality and high fertility  Key reproductive health interventions as part of health systems strengthening  Reaching the poorest of the poor  Meeting the reproductive health needs of the youth  Leveraging partnerships 9/5/20158

9 The Bank will prioritize high burden countries … 9/5/2015 9

10 We will emphasize reproductive health in health systems strengthening by supporting…  Training of health workers and task shifting to fill gaps in skilled birth attendants  Performance incentives for skilled birth attendants and doctors  Country efforts to ensure proper facilities are available and adequate for rapid access to emergency obstetrics care.  Establishment of robust logistics, regulatory and quality assurance systems  Efforts to improve health monitoring systems, especially civil registration 9/5/201510

11 We will support countries in their effort to reach the poor  We will proactively pursue strategies that ensure access to family planning and maternal health services among the poor  Our focus will be on helping countries reach the most vulnerable households – those in the lowest two income quintiles  We will support demand generation for reproductive health services through innovative financing 9/5/201511

12  Training doctors and nurses to address special reproductive health needs of the youth  Supporting program that expanding information/knowledge about family planning and avoiding HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections,  Supporting countries to motivate adolescents to stay in school and pursue their studies and acquire life skills before starting their families We will assist countries to improve access to reproductive services for the youth 9/5/201512

13  Harmonize support for country-led health system strengthening strategies to produce, finance and deliver and increase utilization of reproductive health services.  Ensure reproductive health benefits from ongoing efforts by the GAVI Alliance, Global Fund, World Bank and World Health Organization to develop a Health Systems Funding Platform, which aims at supporting country progress towards national health goals and the MDGs.  Support countries and civil society in strengthening national capacity for achieving MDG 5 through its work with UNFPA, UNICEF, and WHO (H4). We will further leverage our partnerships with global partners and civil society 9/5/201513

14 Moving Forward  Many countries are not on track to meet the MDG 5 target – and have only 5 years left in which to scale up their efforts  Its not only that we need more money and more resources – we also need to do much better than we are doing today and change the ways in which we define, design and implement actions to address issues related to reproductive health  Indeed, it’s a lot about attitudes and established paradigms – which must change if we want to have an impact Not for Quotation 9/5/201514

15 Contact: schowdhury3@worldbank.org The World Bank’s Reproductive Health Action Plan 2010-2015 9/5/201515


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