Showing posts with label family planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family planning. Show all posts

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Province builds on successes in family planning

Nguyen Manh Thao of the northern province of Hoa Binh is happy that he has two daughters.

This is somewhat surprising in Vietnam with its strong patriarchal and Confucianist traditions where families desire to have a son to tend to the family altar, to continue the family lineage and so on.

It is not important whether it is a daughter or a son, Thao said, adding that to have the right conditions to raise them comfortably and ensure a happy life for them is far more important.

Thao, therefore, did not pressurise his wife to give him a son and a third child for the family, another not-too-uncommon practice in the country when the first two children are daughters.

Like his elder brother, Nguyen Manh Hung has no particular preference, and does not say anything to his wife about needing a son. The couple did not adopt any method or measure, western or traditional, to try and influence the baby's gender, another frequently chosen option by many others.

His first child is a girl and the second, a boy. After giving birth to the second child, his wife chose to use the IUD (intrauterine device) sterilisation method, Hung said.

"Two children are enough and I can afford to secure their future based on my financial situation," he added.

Thao and Hung's parents worked very hard to raise their five children, and they often advised their offspring to have only one or two children in order to raise them well.

Nguyen Thi Nga, a family planning worker at Cham Mat Ward in Hoa Binh City , said the number of families having three children in the ward has reduced in recent years.

"The awareness of residents about the advantages of having a smaller family has improved," Nga added.

Unlike earlier, when many families did not want to meet and listen to her about sterilisation, a large number of women are now voluntarily asking for advice on sterilisation methods, she said.

Only 10 of 1,750 households in the ward have a third child.

Nguyen Huy Lam, head of the city's Centre for Population and Family Planning, said in 2008, the third child accounted for nearly three in every 100 births. This dropped to two in 2009 and is expected to remain the same this year, he said.

This is the result of awareness campaigns as well as the implementation of many activities like the establishment of a club for families without the third child in Cham Mat ward, he added.

However, Lam said he is concerned that in Hoa Binh City , more than 50 percent of the third-born children were from well-off families.

Nguyen Thi Nguyet of Cham Mat ward has a son and a daughter, but wants another one despite the advice of family planning workers.

Her family is doing well, so raising one more child is not difficult, she said.

Tran Phuong Hoa, Cham Mat ward's family planning co-ordinator, said some families want to have many children because they thought it will make them happier and will have more people to take care of them when they are old.

In Vietnam , especially in rural and mountainous areas, there are no homes for senior people, and many people are afraid that there will be nobody to take care of them if they have only one or two children.

In particular, some families think that daughters cannot take care of them when they are old because daughters usually live at their husband's house and take care of his parents.

So families with two daughters often want to have one son, Hoa said.

Cao Phong district in the province has many well-off families with more than two children and is among districts with the highest gender imbalance.

The province has a third child rate of 7.7 per cent, according to Nguyen Thi Minh Phuong, deputy head of the provincial Statistic Department, with most of them being boys.

The use of methods to choose a baby's gender before conceiving is popular among the provincial population.

It has contributed to the gender imbalance in Hoa Binh province, which ranks among the top ten provinces in the country in this regard, according to the provincial Statistics Department.

The province will change the content and objectives of its awareness campaigns and also introduce stricter punitive measures as it strives to reduce its gender imbalance and contribute to stable development of the nation's population, Lam said./.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Lower fertility rates targeted in ethnic regions

Ethnic minority regions would need 10 years to reduce fertility rates to 2.1 children per woman, the General Office for Population and Family Planning reported at a seminar on ethnic populations and sexual health in Lao Cai province on Nov. 29.

According to the office's statistics, 20 provinces in Vietnam are home to ethnic minority people that account for 20 percent of the country's total population, and most of those provinces have high birth-rates compared to the rest of the country.

Most of them have a fertilitiy rate of 2.35 births per woman and eight have a rate of over 2.5, including Ha Giang and Kon Tum with rates of up to 3, against the national average of 2.23.

Tran Thi Thanh Mai, director of the office's Department of Communication and Education, said low education levels were behind the problem.

"Their knowledge on family planning and contraceptive measures is limited," she said.

These provinces don't have enough health workers to educate the public about family planning, she added.

Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Ba Thuy said the office would further promote population and reproductive healthcare work to help ethnic minority people reach the country's targeted reduced fertility rate.

In the next few years, family planning services in ethnic minority regions would be further focused, said Thuy.

Measures to control birth-rates and reduce the imbalance of sexes would also be applied.

Thuy said that investment in human resources and finance for the ethnic regions must be increased to achieve the desired results over the next 10 years./.

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Lower fertility rates targeted in ethnic regions

LAO CAI — Ethnic minority regions would need 10 years to reduce fertility rates to 2.1 children per woman, the General Office for Population and Family Planning reported in a seminar on ethnic populations and sexual health in Lao Cai Province on Monday.

According to the office's statistics, 20 provinces in Viet Nam are home to ethnic minority people that account for 20 per cent of the country's total population, and most of those provinces have high birth-rates compared to the rest of the country.

Most of them have a fertilitiy rate of 2.35 births per woman and eight have a rate of over 2.5, including Ha Giang and Kon Tum with rates of up to 3, against the national average of 2.23.

Tran Thi Thanh Mai, director of the office's Department of Communication and Education, said low education levels were behind the problem.

"Their knowledge on family planning and contraceptive measures is limited," she said.

These provinces don't have enough health workers to educate the public about family planning, she added.

Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Ba Thuy said the office would further promote population and reproductive healthcare work to help ethnic minority people reach the country's targeted reduced fertility rate.

In the next few years, family planning services in ethnic minority regions would be further focused, said Thuy.

Measures to control birth-rates and reduce the imbalance of sexes would also be applied.

Thuy said that investment in human resources and finance for the ethnic regions must be increased to achieve the desired results over the next 10 years. — VNS

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Saturday, November 6, 2010

New tool helps measure family planning effects

The Marie Stopes International Vietnam (MSI) plans to share a measurement tool for family planning programmes with Government agencies following its pilot use within MSI clinics, according to MSI country representative Nguyen Thi Bich Hang at the 2010 Asia-Pacific regional research workshop held in central coastal Nha Trang City.

This three-day workshop, which wraps up on October 7, was part of the MSI Research & Metrics Team's on-going research on sexual and reproductive health and family planning in the Asia-Pacific Region.

The measurement tool, called the Impact Calculator, was introduced by Marie Stopes International in 2009. It is intended to help to accurately calculate the effect of family planning programmes on health, economics and the environment, said Hang.

She said this tool helps to evaluate family planning performance and can, consequently, give clear evidence for policymakers to establish long-term policies.

The Impact Calculator can calculate demographic and health impacts, such as the number of pregnancies and abortions averted, the number of maternal, infant and adolescent deaths prevented. The tool can also calculate economic impacts, such as the total savings of households, and community and health systems. And finally, it accounts for environmental impacts, such as the ecological footprints averted.

As of July, 109 private health clinics of BlueStar Network, which operated under supervision of MSI, provided family planning services for nearly 446,000 clients. About a quarter of them received modern contraceptive methods.

The Impact Calculator can translate this set of data to show that nearly 17,000 USD had been saved and nearly 68,000 abortion cases had been averted.

This tool has been made available for use in more than 40 countries worldwide./.

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New tool helps measure family planning effects

HA NOI — The Marie Stopes International Viet Nam (MSI) plans to share a measurement tool for family planning programmes with Government agencies following its pilot use within MSI clinics, according to MSI country representative Nguyen Thi Bich Hang at the 2010 Asia-Pacific regional research workshop held in central coastal Nha Trang City.

This three-day workshop, which wraps up today, was part of the MSI Research & Metrics Team's on-going research on sexual and reproductive health and family planning in the Asia-Pacific Region.

The measurement tool, called the Impact Calculator, was introduced by Marie Stopes International in 2009. It is intended to help to accurately calculate the effect of family planning programmes on health, economics and the environment, said Hang.

She said this tool helps to evaluate family planning performance and can, consequently, give clear evidence for policymakers to establish long-term policies.

The Impact Calculator can calculate demographic and health impacts, such as the number of pregnancies and abortions averted, the number of maternal, infant and adolescent deaths prevented. The tool can also calculate economic impacts, such as the total savings of households, and community and health systems. And finally, it accounts for environmental impacts, such as the ecological footprints averted.

As of July, 109 private health clinics of BlueStar Network, which operated under supervision of MSI, provided family planning services for nearly 446,000 clients. About a quarter of them received modern contraceptive methods.

The Impact Calculator can translate this set of data to show that nearly US$17,000 had been saved and nearly 68,000 abortion cases had been averted.

This tool has been made available for use in more than 40 countries worldwide. — VNS

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Monday, October 25, 2010

Rise in STDs spurs calls for condom use

Officials and experts responsible for monitoring demographics and population growth are worried about a potential decline in family planning and an increase in sexually transmitted diseases when programs providing subsidized condoms are cut next year.

As Vietnam has reached the threshold of becoming a middle-income country, international provision and subsidies of condoms would be cut, said Do Ngoc Tan, director of the Department of Population and Family Planning.

He said that there had been no offers of subsidized condoms for the country's population and family planning program after 2010.

During the 1996-2009 period, the program supplied more than 1.2 billion condoms, of which 435 million were free and 780 million subsidized by up to 70 percent. The popular types of condoms supplied often ranged from VND1,000 to VND3,000 (15 US cents) in value.

It is estimated that from 2011 to 2015, the country would need about 2.3 billion condoms, costing about $57.5 million, Tan said. But currently only 62 million of condoms had been promised by the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).

Nguyen Duc Son, an official from the Ministry of Planning and Investment the country could only afford a third of the total cost for condoms each year if it had to continue the subsidy.

Tan said that people in remote and poor areas all depended on the free supply.

Government programs promoting family planning and provision of free contraceptives had previously been carried out mostly in urban areas and big cities, Tan said, where people with higher incomes were willing to pay for condoms themselves.

However, the program should have been fostered in remote and poor areas, initially to provide access to low-priced condoms, with a gradual shift towards making people pay for the contraceptives themselves.

Duong Quoc Trong, director of the General Department of Population and Family Planning said that a comprehensive program to co-ordinate, manage and supply condoms must be set up.

Communications campaigns were also needed to encourage people to shift from receiving free condoms to buying them for themselves.

Other officials called on couples to financially shoulder the burden with the government.

Huynh Cao Hai, deputy head of the Sub-department of Population and Family Planning of southern Dong Nai Province said if couples could buy the condoms themselves, the program would be effectively sustainable.

Currently, only 20 percent of people who use condoms pay for them.

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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Rise in STDs spurs calls for condom use

Rise in STDs spurs calls for condom use

Officials and experts responsible for monitoring demographics and population growth are worried about a potential decline in family planning and an increase in sexually transmitted diseases when programmes providing subsidised condoms are cut next year.

As Vietnam has reached the threshold of becoming a middle-income country, international provision and subsidies of condoms would be cut, said Do Ngoc Tan, director of the Department of Population and Family Planning.

He said that there had been no offers of subsidised condoms for the country's population and family planning programme after 2010.

During the 1996-2009 period, the programme supplied more than 1.2 billion condoms, of which 435 million were free and 780 million subsidised by up to 70 percent. The popular types of condoms supplied often ranged from 1,000 VND to 3,000 VND (up to 0.15 USD) in value.

It is estimated that from 2011 to 2015, the country would need about 2.3 billion condoms, costing about 57.5 million USD, Tan said. But currently only 62 million of condoms had been promised by the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).

Nguyen Duc Son, an official from the Ministry of Planning and Investment the country could only afford a third of the total cost for condoms each year if it had to continue the subsidy.

Tan said that people in remote and poor areas all depended on the free supply.

Government programmes promoting family planning and provision of free contraceptives had previously been carried out mostly in urban areas and big cities, Tan said, where people with higher incomes were willing to pay for condoms themselves. However, the programme should have been fostered in remote and poor areas, initially to provide access to low-priced condoms, with a gradual shift towards making people pay for the contraceptives themselves.

Duong Quoc Trong, director of the General Department of Population and Family Planning said that a comprehensive programme to co-ordinate, manage and supply condoms must be set up.

Communications campaigns were also needed to encourage people to shift from receiving free condoms to buying them for themselves.

Other officials called on couples to financially shoulder the burden with the Government.

Huynh Cao Hai, deputy head of the Sub-department of Population and Family Planning of southern Dong Nai Province said if couples could buy the condoms themselves, the programme would be effectively sustainable.

Currently, only 20 percent of people who use condoms pay for them./.

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Saturday, October 23, 2010

Rise in STDs spurs calls for condom use

A health worker disseminates information about population and family planning to residents in the central city of Da Nang. Communications campaigns are also needed to encourage people to buy condoms for themselves. — VNA/VNS Photo Duong Ngoc

A health worker disseminates information about population and family planning to residents in the central city of Da Nang. Communications campaigns are also needed to encourage people to buy condoms for themselves. — VNA/VNS Photo Duong Ngoc

HA NOI — Officials and experts responsible for monitoring demographics and population growth are worried about a potential decline in family planning and an increase in sexually transmitted diseases when programmes providing subsidised condoms are cut next year.

As Viet Nam has reached the threshold of becoming a middle-income country, international provision and subsidies of condoms would be cut, said Do Ngoc Tan, director of the Department of Population and Family Planning.

He said that there had been no offers of subsidised condoms for the country's population and family planning programme after 2010.

During the 1996-2009 period, the programme supplied more than 1.2 billion condoms, of which 435 million were free and 780 million subsidised by up to 70 per cent. The popular types of condoms supplied often ranged from VND1,000 to VND3,000 (up to US$0.15) in value.

It is estimated that from 2011 to 2015, the country would need about 2.3 billion condoms, costing about $57.5 million, Tan said. But currently only 62 million of condoms had been promised by the US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).

Nguyen Duc Son, an official from the Ministry of Planning and Investment the country could only afford a third of the total cost for condoms each year if it had to continue the subsidy.

Tan said that people in remote and poor areas all depended on the free supply.

Need for change

Government programmes promoting family planning and provision of free contraceptives had previously been carried out mostly in urban areas and big cities, Tan said, where people with higher incomes were willing to pay for condoms themselves. However, the programme should have been fostered in remote and poor areas, initially to provide access to low-priced condoms, with a gradual shift towards making people pay for the contraceptives themselves.

Duong Quoc Trong, director of the General Department of Population and Family Planning said that a comprehensive programme to co-ordinate, manage and supply condoms must be set up.

Communications campaigns were also needed to encourage people to shift from receiving free condoms to buying them for themselves.

Other officials called on couples to financially shoulder the burden with the Government.

Huynh Cao Hai, deputy head of the Sub-department of Population and Family Planning of southern Dong Nai Province said if couples could buy the condoms themselves, the programme would be effectively sustainable.

Currently, only 20 per cent of people who use condoms pay for them. —VNS

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Officials raise alarm at rising spread of STDs

HA NOI — Officials and public health experts are concerned about the country's family planning sector and an increase in the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

Next year, the country's funds for condoms will expire and individuals will be forced to personally pay for contraceptives.

As Viet Nam approaches middle-income status, international aid for condoms would be cut down, said the Department of Population and Family Planning director, Do Ngoc Tan.

He said no international organisations were offering to supply condoms to the country's population and family planning programmes after 2010.

From 1996 – 2009, the programme supplied more than 1.2 billion condoms to the country, of which 435 million were free and 780 million were sold at subsidised prices. Condoms cost between VND1,000 to VND3,000 (up to US$0.15).

It is estimated that from 2011 to 2015 the country will need about 2.3 billion condoms, which would cost about $57.5 million, Tan said. Currently, 62 million condoms have been provided by the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).

Nguyen Duc Son, an official from the Ministry of Planning and Investment, said if the country continued its subsidised contraceptive programme, Viet Nam would only be able to afford one-third of the total cost for condoms each year .

Tan said that people in remote and poor areas depended on the free supply.

Need for a change

The Government's social marketing programme, which is part of the population and family planning programme, will supply condoms to people at subsidised prices.

The programme is primarily carried out mostly in urban areas where people earn higher incomes and are willing to pay for condoms themselves. The programme would need to focus on remote and poor areas initially to provide access to low-price condoms and then gradually make people pay for contraceptives individually, Tan said.

General Director of the General Department of Population and Family Planning Duong Quoc Trong said a comprehensive programme to co-ordinate, manage and supply condoms must be set up.

Communication campaigns would be needed to encourage people to purchase contraceptives themselves and not to rely on free condoms.

Other officials have called on couples to financially share the cost with the Government.

Deputy head of the Sub-department of Population and Family Planning from southern Dong Nai Province Huynh Cao Hai said if couples could buy the condoms themselves, the programme would be sustainable.

Currently, about 20 per cent of people who use condoms pay for the contraceptives individually. —VNS

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