Table of ContentsChapters
This issue was prepared in collaboration with the Maximizing Access and Quality (MAQ) Initiative of the United States Agency for International Development's Office of Population and Reproductive Health. The MAQ Initiative supports research and evidence-based interventions to promote access and quality of reproductive health and family planning services. ![]() Published by the Information & Knowledge for Optimal Health (INFO) Project, Center for Communication Programs, The Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, Maryland 21202, USA. Volume XXXI, Number 4, |
Moving Beyond Family PlanningIn keeping with the recommendations of the ICPD Programme of Action, family planning services increasingly are being integrated with other sexual and reproductive health services. In addition to family planning, integrated sexual and reproductive health services may address HIV/AIDS and other STIs, infections and cancers of the reproductive system, infertility, gynecological and maternity care, postabortion care, gender-based violence, and education on sexuality and parenting (51, 157). The need to look beyond contraception when working with family planning clients has created new challenges and opportunities for CPI. Focus STI Counseling on the IndividualProviders must do a better job of addressing risk assessment, prevention, and treatment of HIV/AIDS and other STIs. Since family planning service delivery may be one of the few contacts that women have with the health care system, providers have a unique opportunity and responsibility to help clients make appropriate choices to protect against both unintended pregnancy and STI/HIV infection (144). Providers may be reluctant to raise potentially embarrassing topics with clients, however, especially if the clients are married and therefore assumed—sometimes incorrectly—to be at low risk of infection. This reluctance may help explain why in the mid 1990s only about one-quarter of 3,000 clients received information about HIV/AIDS and/or STIs during maternal and child health and family planning consultations in five African countries (Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) (105). Some common strategies to incorporate STI/HIV issues into family planning counseling are problematic. Adding STIs and HIV/AIDS to the routine background information given to all clients may not be feasible because of the time pressures on providers; it also raises the danger of overloading clients with more information than they can absorb (107). Giving STI/HIV information only to clients who fit a high-risk “profile”—for example, sex workers or women whose husbands travel—is no better. Profiles do not reliably identify individuals at risk of infection, and they unfairly stigmatize some clients (141). Instead, information about STI/HIV risk assessment, prevention, and treatment should be a standard part of clinic health talks, community education, and mass media campaigns. During consultations, providers then can focus on assuring that each and every client understands what behaviors are risky and how to protect themselves from possible infection. In family planning consultations, this means helping clients assess their STI risks so they can choose an appropriate method or combination of methods (30, 158). Family Planning Providers |
![]() |
Information & Knowledge for Optimal Health (INFO) Project 111 Market Place Suite 310, Baltimore, MD 21202 Phone: 410-659-6300 Fax: 410-659-6266 Security & Privacy Policy Disclaimer: The information provided on this web site is not official U.S. Government information and does not represent the views or positions of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the U.S. Government. |
![]() |