POPULATION REPORTS

Go to the Most Current Injectables Population Reports

CONTENTS

        Chapters
  1. Research and Regulatory Approval
  2. Use of Injectables
  3. Effectiveness and Reversibility
  4. Side Effects and Complications
  5. More Evidence in the Cancer Debate
  6. Noncontraceptive Health Benefits
  7. Counseling Issues
  8. Communicating with the Public
  9. Maximizing Access and Quality

Published with this issue:

HIGHLIGHTS


Published by the Population Information Program, Center for Communication Programs, The Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, Maryland 21202-4012, USA

Volume XXIII, Number 2 August 1995
New Era for
               Injectables

In the next few years millions of couples throughout the world will be offered the choice of injectable contraceptives. Reassuring research findings, approval of the 3-month injectable in the US, and the introduction of new monthly injectables promise wider access. Whether expanding services or offering injectables for the first time, programs have a new opportunity and challenge to provide good care that responds to their clients' needs.

About 12 million couples throughout the world now use injectable contraceptives. Progestin-only injectables are the most widely used: DMPA (depot medroxyprogesterone acetate), known by the brand name Depo-Provera, provides three months of protection, and NET EN (norethindrone enanthate), known as Noristerat, two months. One-month injectables combine estrogen with progestin. The new monthly injectables Cyclofem and Mesigyna are well-tested alternatives to older monthlies.

Although the first injectables were developed soon after oral contraceptives, limited availability has constrained use in all but a few countries, such as Indonesia and Thailand. More than 100 countries have approved DMPA since the early 1960s, but political controversy and scientific uncertainty have held back injectables in some programs.

Now, research by the World Health Organization (WHO) and US regulatory approval of DMPA may mark the start of a new era for injectables. The WHO research reduced fears about DMPA causing cancer. Approval of DMPA by the United States Food and Drug Administration in 1992 made this injectable available in the US and allows the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to offer DMPA to developing-country family planning programs.

The User's Perspective

Throughout the world many women value injectables because they are highly effective, long-acting, reversible, and convenient, and they can be used privately. Also, breastfeeding women who want to use a hormonal contraceptive can use progestin-only DMPA or NET EN.

Women experience a variety of side effects with injectables, however. Disruption of menstrual bleeding is common, and some women find it troublesome. Counseling helps women understand that the frequent or irregular bleeding and amenorrhea are not dangerous, and many continue to use injectables despite these bleeding changes. Cyclofem and Mesigyna disrupt menstrual bleeding less than DMPA and NET EN. Also, some women using injectables report weight gain, headaches, and dizziness.

Introducing or Expanding Services

Experience with injectables for more than 20 years suggests that the most successful programs:

  • Provide accurate and balanced information and dispel unwarranted fears about injectables through mass-media communication for the public, testimony from satisfied users, client education, and counseling.
  • Counsel to ensure informed choice and use. With information and encouragement from providers, women make their own choices among family planning methods. They also learn what to expect and how to use their method. Having chosen injectables, women need to know when they can get injections and to expect bleeding changes.
  • Expand provision of injectables through pilot projects. Seminars can inform providers and policymakers. Pilot studies can gauge clients' responses and identify key communication and counseling issues.
  • Ensure reliable supply. Order injectables six months to a year in advance, making accurate forecasts of demand. To avoid logistical problems, offer only one progestin-only injectable and, if there is a demand, one monthly injectable.
  • Avoid unnecessary barriers to use of injectables, such as age and parity requirements or restricting the first injection to the first seven days of the menstrual cycle.
  • Use needles and syringes safely. Used disposable equipment should be destroyed. Reusable equipment should be sterilized or high-level disinfected.
  • Consider community-based distribution or social marketing of injectables. These approaches increase availability but require good training and attention to quality.

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Population Reports