Making the world a better place!

Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Hussein Mwinyi (center), shortly before he officially closed the first ever National Family Planning Conference on October 11, 2013. On his right is the Reproductive and Child Health Assistant Director, Dr. Neema Rusibamayila and Advance Family Planning Country Director, Halima Shariff.

We care

Tanzania National Family Planning Conference delegations’ cross-section picture affectionately listening to the facilitators at Mlimani City Conference in Dar es Salaam. The three-day meeting took place from October 9-11, 2013.

We set the agenda

Family Planning stakeholders in a workshop in Dar es Salaam.

Service on the move

Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Hussein Mwinyi, awarding as the best young researcher, Dr. Catherine Kahabuka, from National Institute for Medical Research Center. Looking on from left to right: Christine Lasway (FHI 360), Dr. Neema Rusibamayila (RCHS- MOHSW), Dr. Andrew Kitua (Private Consultant) and Halima Shariff (AFP-JHU).

Media contribution in advocacy

Media managers and senior editors on a family planning coverage in Tanzania media report dissemination.

Service delivery

Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Hussein Mwinyi, posses with the Late Tim Manchester Award Family Planning Champion, Maurice Hiza, from RCHS- MOHSW. Others from left: Dr. Neema Rusibamayila (RCHS- MOHSW), Dr. Andrew Kitua (Private Consultant) and Halima Shariff (AFP-JHU).

Reinvigoration

Tanzania Vice President, Dr. Mohammed Gharib Bilal, pressing a computer button to relaunch the ‘Green Star’ Campaign during the opening of the Tanzania’s National Family Planning Conference on 9th October 2013.

Making a world a better place

President Jakaya Kikwete giving Advance Family Planning (AFP) Tanzania Office Director, Ms Halima Shariff, a copy of the Sharpened One Plan (2014 – 2015) that underlines the focus leads the way for the One Plan II (2015-2020). The Countdown to 2015 ending preventable maternal, newborn and child deaths Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) in Tanzania.

Service on the move

President Kikwete (second right) and Deputy Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Kebwe Stephen Kebwe (third left), display Tanzania Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) a first three months January to March 2014 Scorecard that will be used as regional indicators on accountability aimed at reducing Maternal, Newborn and Child Survival.

We set the agenda

President Jakaya Kikwete, the First Lady Salma Kikwete with national and international organizations health stakeholders delegates following a presentation of an overview of the current status of Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) in Tanzania before launching the Sharpened One Plan (2014 – 2015) and Scorecard that will underline regional’s quartering performance.

Service delivery

President Jakaya Kikwete addressing health stakeholders delegates on a launch of the Sharpened One Plan (2014 – 2015) on Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (RMNCH) and Tanzania Regions Quarterly Scorecard that will identify gaps in coverage, equity, and quality for essential care, and outlines practical solutions and strategies.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Global Leaders for Addis Ababa International Conference on Family Planning

Malawian President Joyce Banda
Malawian President Joyce Banda, Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Co-Chair Melinda Gates are among the global leaders who will underscore the urgency of ensuring the availability of family planning services for everyone who wants them at the third International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP 2013).

New commitments to expand contraceptive access and options will be announced at the conference, which will be the largest meeting on family planning to date, bringing thousands of political leaders, experts, researchers and advocates to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on 12-15 November 2013.

Organized around the theme “Full Access, Full Choice,” ICFP 2013 will call attention to the wide-ranging benefits of helping people plan their families – including improved maternal, newborn and child health, increased educational attainment, and greater economic opportunity.

November meeting in Ethiopia will call attention to wide-ranging benefits of family planning and highlight efforts to provide everyone with voluntary contraceptive information and services

The conference will also highlight national and global efforts to provide everyone with voluntary family planning information, services and methods that meet their needs.

Scheduled speakers include Dr. Joyce Banda, President, Malawi, Yingluck Shinawatra, Prime Minister, Thailand, Melinda Gates, Co-Chair, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and  Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, Executive Director, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), 

Others are; Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, Chair, African Union, Dr. Kesete-birhan Admasu, Minister of Health, Ethiopia, Dr. Janette Garin, former Congresswoman and current Undersecretary of Health, Philippines, Anne Richards, Assistant Secretary for Population, Refugees and Migration, United States and Anuradha Gupta, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, India

“Women and girls everywhere want the opportunity to reach their full potential,” said Melinda Gates. “Access to family planning information and contraceptives empower women to plan their families, get a better education, and provide a healthier future for their children.”

In the developing world, 222 million women who don’t want to get pregnant lack access to lifesaving contraceptives, information and services.

ICFP 2013 will build on the momentum of the 2012 London Summit on Family Planning, which generated unprecedented commitments from international donors, emerging economies, civil society and the private sector to give 120 million more women voluntary access to family planning by 2020.

“Many partners have a role to play in expanding family planning access, but success ultimately depends on the sustained commitment of national leaders,” said President Joyce Banda. “Malawi is working diligently so our people have the services and information they need and deserve. We are grateful to all who are supporting us to achieve that goal.” 

Each day of ICFP 2013 will focus on a theme central to expanding family planning access and options: Making a Difference through Sustained Political Commitment - 12 November (evening): The conference’s opening ceremony will include heads of state and other leaders discussing the role of political leadership in expanding family planning access worldwide.

•Achieving Equity through Women in Leadership - 13 November (all day): Speakers throughout the day will highlight female champions for family planning and gender equality. Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) will announce a new report on progress since the London Summit.

•The Young and the Restless: Effective Teenage Pregnancy Prevention Programs - 14 November (all day): Dynamic youth speakers will address the importance of tailoring family planning programs for young people.

•Moving Forward: Highlighting Progress and New Commitments - 15 November (morning and afternoon): The final day of the conference will showcase progress on FP2020 and best practices to expand contraceptive access to millions of women globally by 2020.

A High-Level Ministerial Meeting focused on youth and the Demographic Dividend will be held on 12 November in Addis Ababa, preceding the conference.

ICFP 2013 is jointly organized by the Ministry of Health of Ethiopia and the Bill and Melinda Gates Institute for Population and Reproductive Health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. ICFP 2013 will be the largest family planning conference to date, following the inaugural ICFP in Kampala, Uganda, in 2009 and ICFP 2011 in Dakar, Senegal.

WHAT: International Conference on Family Planning (ICFP) 2013

WHEN: 12-15 November 2013

WHERE: African Union Conference Center, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

REGISTRATION: Conference registration is now open, and members of the media are invited to apply for accreditation to register for the conference at no cost. To register for ICFP 2013, please visit www.fpconference2013.org/register.

MORE INFORMATION: For more information, please visit www.fpconference2013.org and follow us Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Leah Sandals, Global Health Strategies
lsandals@globalhealthstrategies.com
+1 646-867-2877

Friday, October 11, 2013

New FP clients colour National FP Conference

By Benedict Sichalwe: OVER 2,000 family planning new users have been registered in 11 health facilities as a remark of a three day National Family Planning Conference held in Dar es Salaam.

While the total of 2,432 new clients joined the different methods, the mostly preferable one was the implants which hit at 1,161 women followed by inject-able, contraceptive oral pills counts to 891 while IUDS clients were 279.

The Dar es Salaam Family Planning Regional Coordinator, Zukrah Mkwizu said the 11 centers selected in Kinondoni district and were distributed contraceptives commodities to support the national meeting.

“The turn up shows that there is a big number of women and young girls whom prefer to use contraceptives but we hadn’t meet them. This indicates that there is a need to make progressive intervention methods to met family planning un-meet needs,” she insisted.

Speaking on the shortcoming of services, mama Mkwizu cited inadequate number of skilled service providers as the main challenge. She said many health providers lack skills and they are barriers to the community.

“Not every health provider has family planning skills. That is a major challenge and a barrier. If someone needs to use the services, she or he needs to have proper information. Lacking skilled personnel cause clients to use contraceptives without proper approach,” said Mkwizu.

She highlighted using contraceptives without well information that it leads to misconception when the user faces side effects.

On the first day of the conference that was held at Mlimani City Conference Hall, 632 new clients were registered, 908 were registered on the second day while 892 registered on the day three. Majority of the new clients were aged between 25 to 46 years.

The Tanzania National Family Planning Conference convened 540 academicians, government officials, health providers, trainers, and advocates from around Tanzania, lasted by a national declaration that aim to share knowledge from research and programmatic experiences to inform at-scale implementation of effective strategies to reposition Family Planning in the country.

Furthermore, the conference serves as a platform to catalyze a paradigm shift to deliberately accelerate progress towards meeting the national goal of 60% contraceptive prevalence rate by 2015.

The conference featured the reinvigorated of the Green Star campaign launched during its opening, targeted to increase those were remarkable and inspiring knowledge of all Tanzanians in the field of family planning.

The revitalized campaign seeks to emphasize the importance of healthy timing and spacing of pregnancy, and disseminate accurate information about the range of family planning methods available so that women, men, and couples can have children when they are ready to do so.

The campaign’s slogan, "Fuata Nyota ya Kijani" or "Follow the Green Star", encourages Tanzanians to go for family planning information, services and supplies wherever they see the Green Star logo.

The Green Star campaign is part of government's efforts to fulfill one of the six commitments that President Kikwete made at the Family Planning London Summit in July 2012 that ushered in the FP 2020 campaign, where he said Tanzania would implement "strategic communication to address barriers to family planning use and expand demand".

"Green Star" will be rolled out on radio, through electronic and print media, as well as at community level and in health facilities. The campaign refers users to the mobile for reproductive health (m4RH) SMS platform for more information.

The conference program featured six plenary and 20 panel sessions, over 100 oral and poster presentations, four non-abstract sessions, exhibition, on-site service delivery, and six skill building workshops.

In July 2012, national governments, donors, civil society, the private sector, the research and development community, and others from across the world came together at the London Summit on Family Planning to support the right of women and girls to decide, freely and for themselves, whether, when and how many children they have.

The Summit called for unprecedented global political commitments and resources that will enable 120 million more women and girls to use contraceptives by 2020.

DECLARATION OF COMMITMENT: National Family Planning Conference October 11, 2013

We, citizens and friends of Tanzania representing different stakeholder groups of family planning, including representatives of the Government of Tanzania, development partners, Members of Parliament, civil societies and non-governmental organizations, and private sector corporations convened in Dar es Salaam on October 9- 11th, 2013 at the National Family Planning Conference and re-affirmed our individual commitment in our respective roles to act towards strengthening the family planning movement, and intensifying current efforts to accelerate the implementation of the National Family Planning Costed Implementation Program (2010-2015) at all levels, to achieve universal access to voluntary quality family planning in Tanzania; and contribute to attainment of the country’s FP2020 commitments.

Recognizing that:
                       i.            family planning is requisite for enabling the country to achieve its Vision 2025 goal - to achieve a high-quality livelihood for the people and develop a strong and competitive economy;
                     ii.            family planning is an important and cost-effective way to prevent HIV-positive births, and by extension, the number of children needing HIV treatment, care and support, and an effective strategy to prevent HIV transmission for improving access to and use of voluntary contraception;
                    iii.            about half (50%) of our country’s population is under the age of 15, and that 23 percent of women aged 15-19 years have begun childbearing with little or no access to contraceptives;
                   iv.            young people need special attention, both in increasing their access to information, education, and friendly services to empower  them to choose and use contraceptive methods effectively;
                     v.            increased use of family planning has great potential to contribute to the country’s One Plan target of reducing maternal mortality from 454 to 193 per 100,000 live births by 2015; and
                   vi.            the country’s development is not keeping pace with the rapid population growth at 2.9% per year;existing laws and regulations that may impede choice and increased access to family planning services.

Acknowledging that:
i.                     considerable progress has been made to advance family planning since the launch of the National Family Planning Costed Implementation Program (NFPCIP) in 2010, including lessening of stock-outs at various levels and funding availability for commodities;
ii.                   the Government of Tanzania (GoT) is committed to prioritize, facilitate and support in an integrated manner the provision of quality family planning and reproductive and child health services to men, women, adolescents, and children in the country;
iii.                  a specific FP target, has been included in Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF); and targets for total fertility and population growth rate reduction in the 2nd National Strategy for Growth and Reduction of Poverty (MKUKUTA II);

We take note of the various Africa Regional frameworks and global conventions, agreements and initiatives such as:
i.                     the Abuja Declaration (2001), Maputo Protocol, the Maputo Plan of Action on the Operationalization of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (2006);
ii.                   the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Programme of Action 1994—to provide universal access to family planning, and sexual and reproductive health services and rights; deliver gender equality, empowerment of women and equal access to education for girls; address the individual, social and economic impact of urbanization and migration; and support sustainable development and environmental issues associated with population changes;
iii.                  the UN Secretary General’s initiative, Every Woman Every Child in 2010 aimed at improving women’s and children’s health around the world;
iv.                 the FP2020 initiative to reduce unmet need for family planning;
v.                   the MDGs forging global partnership to reduce extreme poverty by 2015;
vi.                 the various African resolutions and frameworks made through ECSA and SADC; and
vii.                the UN Human Rights Council Resolution recognizing maternal mortality and morbidity as a human rights concern, 17 June 2009.


Concerned that:
i)                    increasing unmet need for family planning from 21.8% in 2004-2005 to 25% in 2010, and the rapid population growth of 2.7% annually exhibited over the years and in the 2012 Census Report with a noted 10 million population increase from 2002 to the current 45million overwhelms country development efforts;

ii)                   the momentum to reposition and reinvigorate family planning in Tanzania has been slow  with an annual CPR rate of growth of 1.1%  (2004-2010) against 5.2% required to attain the national CPR target of 60% by 2015;

iii)                 existing disparities especially in geographical areas with low family planning activities/investment, and among groups including adolescents and young people impact negatively on universal access to family planning information, services and supplies;

iv)                 sociocultural factors such as harmful traditional practices (FGM, early marriage); misconceptions around continued education of pregnant girls; violence against women and girls; misconceptions around contraception methods, use and access; and inadequate communication within communities continue to pose barriers to uptake of family planning services;

We jointly commit to achieve universal access to quality family planning in Tanzania by 2020 and beyond, and pledge to intensify and accelerate efforts at national, regional, district and community levels to implement strategic interventions in the NFPCIP by:

§  Reducing disparities and inequities, ensuring that information, services and supplies reach every Tanzanian of reproductive age in need of family planning services in particular young people and others who are disadvantaged in their access.
§  Optimizing the performance of the health system focusing on efficiency of logistics and distribution of family planning commodities, institutions, and maximizing productivity and capacity of health care workers.
§  Demonstrating country ownership and accountability by working in partnership to ensure national and district-level resources support the priorities of women, young people, and communities to plan for healthy and productive families.

As representatives of the Tanzania Central Government, we commit to:
1.       Exercise our responsibility of enhanced leadership and governance to ensure the NFPCIP receives high operational priority for resources (financial, human, and technical) and achieves optimum managerial support;
2.       Amplify resource mobilization efforts for family planning from internal and external sources to sustain efforts in reducing the unmet need for family planning and attaining the 60% CPR target by 2015, and ensuring contraceptive security at all levels.
3.       Strengthen accountability in family planning program implementation through monitoring and evaluating progress and results;
4.       Effectively coordinate family planning interventions, and partnerships as well as encourage the participation of civil societies, non-governmental organizations and the private sector.
5.       Facilitate and prioritize the integration of family planning in development plans at national and district levels, and strive for timely disbursement of all allocations requested for family planning programs.
6.       Strengthen data management and documentation of evidence to improve policy and planning for family planning
7.       Ensure availability of revised policy guidelines, standards at all levels.

As Members of Parliament, we commit to:
  1. Represent and engage community leadership in responding to public demand for family planning services and in ensuring relevant government institutions are accountable to provision of voluntary family planning services,
  2. Champion family planning at all forums—in parliament, at constituency and community level, and at all events—to enhance leadership and public understanding of the health and socio-economic benefits of family planning.
  3. Promote government accountability and efficiency in delivering family planning services, monitor progress at community level, and influence resource allocation to meet family planning needs.

As Regional and District Government Authorities, we commit to:
1.       Prioritize family planning activities in Comprehensive Council Health Plans and budgets, and demonstrate their relevance to other health and development sectors, and monitor progress;
2.       Implement modalities to address barriers to access in collaboration with key stakeholders including the private sector.
3.       Progressively increase the level of council resources allocated for family planning activities by setting a specific percentage increase in the annual budget to match resource requirements in order to meet set targets for contraceptive prevalence by 2015
4.      Take concrete and deliberate efforts with other stakeholders to strengthen outreach and community based services to reach underserved populations, including young people, poor women and those with disabilities in remote settings; ensure utilization of data for effective planning and accountability.
As representatives of Development Partners, we commit to:
1.       Facilitate the provision of targeted, relevant and coordinated technical knowledge and support that is responsive to Tanzania’s needs and that contributes to attaining universal access to voluntary family planning information, services and supplies.
2.       In a timely manner, fulfill financial resource commitments made at the July 2012 London Summit and in respective bilateral agreements towards enhancing commodity security, adequate and timely delivery of family planning services.

As Representatives of Civil Societies and Non-Governmental Organizations, we commit to:
1.       Work in partnership with government and development partners to implement coordinated and targeted family planning programs, and advocacy initiatives that uphold human rights, the right to quality information and services, and an enabling policy and resource environment.
2.       Compliment national family planning efforts and promote community-based strategies to ensure citizens participation in family planning programs through information, priority setting, education and gender empowerment campaigns.
3.       Monitor progress from the grassroots and up to feed into policy processes and actions through Parliament and government, and hold leaders accountable to family planning unmet needs.
4.       Jointly collaborate to implement coordinated, results-based efforts in line with the NFPCIP while ensuring the effective and efficient utilization of resources to achieve maximum results;
5.       Advocate for enhanced government accountability to the Tanzanian citizens for their development policies, strategies and performance, with a specific focus on family planning goals and commitments.
6.       Lead advocacy efforts to ensure an enabling policy, regulatory, managerial and operational environment and address customary, legislative and religious barriers to access quality family planning services
7.       Work in partnership with the government and other stakeholders to strengthen health systems to ensure health availability, sustainability, access and use of quality services and supplies.
As Representatives of Private Sector Corporations, we commit to:
1.       Build strong partnerships among the corporate companies and between them and the public sector to sustain continuous support to national efforts to ensure sufficient supply of family planning commodities and services especially in hard-to-reach groups and geographical areas.
2.       Work towards ensuring that an effective funding mechanism (like Basket Funding system) is in place to periodically support and sustain initiatives aimed at strengthening access to family planning information, services and supplies with a view to improving health of mothers and children in Tanzania.
3.       Promote innovations and entrepreneurship in order to enhance strategies and technologies that address young people’s sexual and reproductive health knowledge and service needs.




[1] Throughout this document, family planning refers to voluntary quality family planning.

Low CPR, early marriage cases reported in rural areas

BY JEAN EYASE:
Over 25 percent of women and girls of reproductive age in Tanzania suffer an unmet need with 1 in 4 women willing to access family planning services.

Unmet need for modern contraceptives is higher in the poorest regions and among the poorest social groups, young women, less educated ones and those live in rural area.

Women in the rural poorest areas have a high unmet need for contraceptives and the lowest Contraceptive Prevalence Rate (CPR). They also have the highest early pregnancies and early marriage cases,” said Dorothy Temu- Usiri, Assistant Representative, Population and Development, UNFPA, highlighting Singida, Kigoma and Shinyanga as the regions with higher cases.

One of the many benefits of investing in family planning and addressing the unmet needs is its significant contribution to the improvements in sexual and reproductive health, including reducing maternal and child mortality and morbidity.

Family planning also advances gender equality by ensuring that women have the ability to plan and space their pregnancies time thus increasing women’s opportunities for education, employment and full participation in the social development activities.

It also alleviates poverty by reducing strain on public services thus governments can easily meet citizen’s basic needs and invest well in education, health and skills for development. This cuts across all the five Millennium Development Goals.

Globally, 222 million women have unmet needs for family planning contraceptives and world leaders have put measures to see to it that these needs are well addressed to improve the health of women and newborns.

As explained during the National Family Planning Conference in Dar es Salaam by Dr. Fatma Mrisho, the Executive Chairperson, Tanzania Commission for AIDS (TACAIDS), meeting women’s needs for contraceptives, maternal and child health care will prevent 54 million women globally from getting unintended pregnancies yearly.

Ake ily planning stakeholders emphasize that youths make a large number of unmet needs as most of them face enormous challenges in accessing reproductive health information including family planning services.

Myths and misconceptions on family planning fear of stigma that is caused by the community and lack of access to prefer family planning methods are some of the reasons to the high number of young girls not accessing services.

Dr. Grace Magembe of AMREF Tanzania shared data on how young people engage in early sex which begs the concern of them accessing family planning services. One in 3 girls in developing countries such as Tanzania marries before the age of 18 and 1 in 7 girls before 15 years.

About 50% and 43% of young women and men have had sex by 18 years (THIMS, 2011/12), the Tanzania Demographic Health Survey, 2010 (TDHS) reveals that 56% have become mothers by age 20, only 12% of women aged 15-19 use contraceptives, 58% and 13% of women and men respectively are married by 20 years and girls age 15-19 are 2 times likely to die from pregnant related causes according to the World Health Organization records (WHO, 2006).” She said.

WHO definitions adopted in Tanzania states that young people is group of those aged between 10-24 years; youth group composed by people aged from 15 to 24 years while adolescents are those aged from 10 to 19 years.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Ministries urged to support the use of contraceptives

BY JEAN EYASE:AT least five Government ministries have been directed to work closely to ensure that family planning services reach more people in Tanzania by 2020.

Speaking in Dar es Salaam October 9, 2013, Vice President, Dr. Gharib Bilal, said only 27 per cent of women who need the said services use modern family planning services.

Dr. Bilal was speaking during the National Family Planning Conference which also witnessed him re-launching the Green Star programme with its slogan: ‘follow the green star for development’.

“The Government needs to see the contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) increase from the current 4.2 million women to five million by 2015, and 60 per cent of them by 2020 as the last year’s London Summit directed,” he said.

He named the ministries that were needed to deal with family planning issue as the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, the Ministry of Education and Vocational Training and Ministry of Finance.

Others are the Prime Minister’s Office, Regional Administration and Local and the Ministry of Community Development, Gender and Children.

He cited the dependence on foreign aids to serve family panning in the country as one of the major challenges facing his Government, hence, the said ministries would have to find the way to accumulate fund from local means.

The conference, which is attended by more than 500 Tanzanians and foreign health experts targeted to find local solutions to local problems in family planning.

Speaking at the same event, the Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Hussein Mwinyi,  said the correct usage of family planning services would improve mothers and children health.

“People should understand that family planning leads to family development as well as the nation at large. Healthy mothers will have a good time to participate in development activities,” he said.

Previously, the Tanzania Commission for AIDS (TACAIDS) Director, Dr. Fatma Mrisho, challenged the media to assist the desperate girls who damp their babies instead of harassing them.

She said those new mother sometimes decide to damp their babies after being ignored by society.

Tanzania Vice President, Dr. Mohammed Gharib Bilal, pressing a computer button to reinvigorates the ‘Green Star’ Campaign during the opening of the Tanzania’s National Family Planning Conference on 9th October 2013.
The three day conference ended last Friday at Mlimani City in Dar es Salaam.

Tanzania National Family Planning Conference delegations’ cross-section picture affectionately listening to the facilitators at Mlimani City Conference in Dar es Salaam. The three-day meeting took place from October 9-11, 2013.

State trumps contraceptive use

Dr Mohamed Gharib Bilal
TANZANIA seeks to double the number of people who use contraceptives for family planning from the current 2.1 million to 4.2 million people by the year 2020, Vice-President, Dr Mohamed Gharib Bilal, has declared.

This will be made possible through adequate and timely provisions of contraceptives and public awareness on family planning among other measures, according to Dr Bilal.

The vice-president made the remarks in Dar es Salaam yesterday when officiating at a National Family Planning Conference and re-launch of the 'Green Star' campaign. The drive is aimed at fostering family planning in the country. The upshot is to increase the number of people using contraceptives locally.

The move comes at a time when studies have shown that the contraceptive prevalence rate in developing countries is 72.4 per cent, while in Tanzania it is just 27 per cent.

During the London Summit for Family Planning last year world leaders agreed on increasing the number of people on family planning to 120 million by 2020. "In order to achieve the goal extra efforts are required by respective government ministries and development partners," Dr Bilal said.

The VP said the government is committed to increasing the budget for family planning from internal sources and reduce dependency on development partners in a bid to improve efficiency in service delivery.

"I hope during this meeting, which has brought together participants from within and outside the country, you will also deliberate on strategies to enhance partnership between the public and private sectors towards efficiency," Dr Bilal told participants at the meeting.

The VP stressed that family planning is crucial in lessening maternal, infant and child mortality rates as well as teen pregnancies. Speaking earlier at the occasion, the Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Hussein Mwinyi, said that proper use of family planning methods could reduce maternal mortality rates by between 20 and 35 per cent and 10 to 12 per cent for children.

Available statistics show that 454 in 100,000 women die each year due to complications at the time of giving birth, the minister noted. "Family planning enables a mother to avoid unexpected pregnancies and thus reduce cases of abortion.

The use of methods such as condoms also helps to check transmission of HIV/AIDS," Dr Mwinyi said. Apart from health benefits, the minister said family planning is also vital checking population growth. The National Housing and Population Census of 2012 showed that Tanzania has a population of about 40 million up from 34 million recorded in 2002.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Government recommit its role in supporting family planning


Vice President, Dr. Ghalib Mohamed Bilal, pressing a button to re-launch the Green Star campaign after opening the National Family Planning Conference in Dar es Salaam. On his right is Minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Hussein Mwinyi and left are TACAIDS Chairpersn, Dr. Fatuma Mrisho; Family Planning stakeholders with FP2020 Director, Dr Valerio De Fillipo (in a blue coat).
BY ABELA MSIKULA: The Vice President, Dr Ghalib Mohamed Bilal, has said that in efforts to improve family planning, Tanzania plans to increase fund from domestic sources through the central and local government so as to reduce dependency on donors.

Speaking during the opening ceremony of a three-day national family planning conference and re-launch of the Green Star, he said the step would help the country to have sustainable services of family planning.

“We also encourage availability of enough contraceptives and on time, as well as fighting against and remove misconceptions on the modern family planning methods,” said the Vice President.

The Vice President request the Ministry for Health, Finance, Gender and Women Development, Prime Ministers Regional and Local Government Authorities and the Planning Commission at the President’s office to corporate in revolving family planning services.

Dr. Billal encourage on males participation, availability of education and information on family planning among the community including youths.

On his part, the Minister for Health and Social welfare, Dr Hussein Mwinyi, said family planning would reduce maternal mortality and infant mortality from 20 to 35 and from 10 to 12 per cent respectively.

“This is because family planning enables a woman to avoid frequent as well as unintended pregnancies, hence, to escape unsafe abortions,” he said.

However, he said, family planning would help mothers to avoid risk pregnancies which occur to adolescence  as well as pregnancies on women  above the age of  35 years.

Together with health-wise advantages, according to the minister, family planning had also the huge opportunity to reduce rapid population growth