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Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan

BACKGROUND: Pakistan has had a low contraceptive prevalence rate for the last two decades; with preference for natural birth spacing methods and condoms. Family planning services offered by the public sector have never fulfilled the demand for contraception, particularly in rural areas. In the priva...

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Autores principales: Khurram Azmat, Syed, Tasneem Shaikh, Babar, Hameed, Waqas, Mustafa, Ghulam, Hussain, Wajahat, Asghar, Jamshaid, Ishaque, Muhammad, Ahmed, Aftab, Bilgrami, Mohsina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3772094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074260
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author Khurram Azmat, Syed
Tasneem Shaikh, Babar
Hameed, Waqas
Mustafa, Ghulam
Hussain, Wajahat
Asghar, Jamshaid
Ishaque, Muhammad
Ahmed, Aftab
Bilgrami, Mohsina
author_facet Khurram Azmat, Syed
Tasneem Shaikh, Babar
Hameed, Waqas
Mustafa, Ghulam
Hussain, Wajahat
Asghar, Jamshaid
Ishaque, Muhammad
Ahmed, Aftab
Bilgrami, Mohsina
author_sort Khurram Azmat, Syed
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pakistan has had a low contraceptive prevalence rate for the last two decades; with preference for natural birth spacing methods and condoms. Family planning services offered by the public sector have never fulfilled the demand for contraception, particularly in rural areas. In the private sector, cost is a major constraint. In 2008, Marie Stopes Society – a local NGO started a social franchise programme along with a free voucher scheme to promote uptake of IUCDs amongst the poor. This paper evaluates the effectiveness of this approach, which is designed to increase modern long term contraceptive awareness and use in rural areas of Pakistan. METHODOLOGY: We used a quasi-experimental study design with controls, selecting one intervention district and one control district from the Sindh and Punjab provinces. In each district, we chose a total of four service providers. A baseline survey was carried out among 4,992 married women of reproductive age (MWRA) in February 2009. Eighteen months after the start of intervention, an independent endline survey was conducted among 4,003 women. We used multilevel logistic regression for analysis using Stata 11. RESULTS: Social franchising used alongside free vouchers for long term contraceptive choices significantly increased the awareness of modern contraception. Awareness increased by 5% in the intervention district. Similarly, the ever use of modern contraceptive increased by 28.5%, and the overall contraceptive prevalence rate increased by 19.6%. A significant change (11.1%) was recorded in the uptake of IUCDs, which were being promoted with vouchers. CONCLUSION: Family planning franchise model promotes awareness and uptake of contraceptives. Moreover, supplemented with vouchers, it may enhance the use of IUCDs, which have a significant cost attached. Our research also supports a multi-pronged approach- generating demand through counselling, overcoming financial constraints by offering vouchers, training, accreditation and branding of the service providers, and ensuring uninterrupted contraceptive supplies.
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spelling pubmed-37720942013-09-25 Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan Khurram Azmat, Syed Tasneem Shaikh, Babar Hameed, Waqas Mustafa, Ghulam Hussain, Wajahat Asghar, Jamshaid Ishaque, Muhammad Ahmed, Aftab Bilgrami, Mohsina PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Pakistan has had a low contraceptive prevalence rate for the last two decades; with preference for natural birth spacing methods and condoms. Family planning services offered by the public sector have never fulfilled the demand for contraception, particularly in rural areas. In the private sector, cost is a major constraint. In 2008, Marie Stopes Society – a local NGO started a social franchise programme along with a free voucher scheme to promote uptake of IUCDs amongst the poor. This paper evaluates the effectiveness of this approach, which is designed to increase modern long term contraceptive awareness and use in rural areas of Pakistan. METHODOLOGY: We used a quasi-experimental study design with controls, selecting one intervention district and one control district from the Sindh and Punjab provinces. In each district, we chose a total of four service providers. A baseline survey was carried out among 4,992 married women of reproductive age (MWRA) in February 2009. Eighteen months after the start of intervention, an independent endline survey was conducted among 4,003 women. We used multilevel logistic regression for analysis using Stata 11. RESULTS: Social franchising used alongside free vouchers for long term contraceptive choices significantly increased the awareness of modern contraception. Awareness increased by 5% in the intervention district. Similarly, the ever use of modern contraceptive increased by 28.5%, and the overall contraceptive prevalence rate increased by 19.6%. A significant change (11.1%) was recorded in the uptake of IUCDs, which were being promoted with vouchers. CONCLUSION: Family planning franchise model promotes awareness and uptake of contraceptives. Moreover, supplemented with vouchers, it may enhance the use of IUCDs, which have a significant cost attached. Our research also supports a multi-pronged approach- generating demand through counselling, overcoming financial constraints by offering vouchers, training, accreditation and branding of the service providers, and ensuring uninterrupted contraceptive supplies. Public Library of Science 2013-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3772094/ /pubmed/24069287 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074260 Text en © 2013 Azmat et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Khurram Azmat, Syed
Tasneem Shaikh, Babar
Hameed, Waqas
Mustafa, Ghulam
Hussain, Wajahat
Asghar, Jamshaid
Ishaque, Muhammad
Ahmed, Aftab
Bilgrami, Mohsina
Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan
title Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan
title_full Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan
title_fullStr Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan
title_short Impact of Social Franchising on Contraceptive Use When Complemented by Vouchers: A Quasi-Experimental Study in Rural Pakistan
title_sort impact of social franchising on contraceptive use when complemented by vouchers: a quasi-experimental study in rural pakistan
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3772094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069287
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074260
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