Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA. Now with North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public Health, Raleigh, NC, USA.
Glob Health Sci Pract. 2016 Dec 28;4(4):594-609. doi: 10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00197. Print 2016 Dec 23.
The Family Planning 2020 initiative aims to reach 120 million new family planning users by 2020. Drug shops and pharmacies are important private-sector sources of contraception in many contexts but are less well understood than public-sector sources, especially in urban environments. This article explores the role that drug shops and pharmacies play in the provision of contraceptive methods in selected urban areas of Nigeria and Kenya as well as factors associated with women's choice of where to obtain these methods.
Using data collected in 2010/2011 from representative samples of women in selected urban areas of Nigeria and Kenya as well as a census of pharmacies and drug shops audited in 2011, we examine the role of drug shops and pharmacies in the provision of short-acting contraceptive methods and factors associated with a women's choice of family planning source.
In urban Nigeria and Kenya, drug shops and pharmacies were the major source for the family planning methods of oral contraceptive pills, emergency contraceptives, and condoms. The majority of injectable users obtained their method from public facilities in both countries, but 14% of women in Nigeria and 6% in Kenya obtained injectables from drug shops or pharmacies. Harder-to-reach populations were the most likely to choose these outlets to obtain their short-acting methods. For example, among users of these methods in Nigeria, younger women (<25 years old) were significantly more likely to obtain their method from a drug shop or pharmacy than another type of facility. In both countries, family planning users who had never been married were significantly more likely than married users to obtain these methods from a drug shop or a pharmacy than from a public-sector health facility. Low levels of family planning-related training (57% of providers in Kenya and 41% in Nigeria had received training) and lack of family planning promotional activities in pharmacies and drug shops in both countries indicate the need for additional support from family planning programs to leverage this important access point.
Drug shops and pharmacies offer an important and under-leveraged mechanism for expanding family planning access to women in urban Nigeria and Kenya, and potentially elsewhere. Vulnerable and harder-to-reach groups such as younger, unmarried women and women who do not yet have children are the most likely to benefit from increased access to family planning at drug shops and pharmacies.
计划生育 2020 倡议旨在到 2020 年使 1.2 亿新的计划生育用户受益。在许多情况下,药店和药房是避孕的重要私营部门来源,但它们不如公共部门来源那么为人所知,尤其是在城市环境中。本文探讨了药店和药房在提供避孕方法方面在尼日利亚和肯尼亚选定城市地区所扮演的角色,以及与妇女选择在何处获得这些方法相关的因素。
利用 2010/2011 年从尼日利亚和肯尼亚选定城市地区的妇女代表性样本以及 2011 年审计的药店和药房普查中收集的数据,我们检查了药店和药房在提供短期避孕方法方面的作用以及与妇女选择计划生育来源相关的因素。
在尼日利亚和肯尼亚的城市地区,药店和药房是口服避孕药、紧急避孕药和避孕套等计划生育方法的主要来源。在这两个国家,大多数注射剂使用者都是从公共设施获得其方法,但在尼日利亚有 14%的女性和肯尼亚有 6%的女性从药店或药房获得注射剂。较难接触到的人群最有可能选择这些渠道来获得他们的短期方法。例如,在尼日利亚使用这些方法的使用者中,年龄较小的女性(<25 岁)比其他类型的设施更有可能从药店或药房获得其方法。在这两个国家,从未结婚的计划生育使用者比已婚使用者更有可能从药店或药房而不是从公共部门卫生机构获得这些方法。肯尼亚的提供者中只有 57%接受过计划生育方面的培训,而尼日利亚只有 41%,这表明药店和药房在这两个国家都缺乏计划生育宣传活动,需要计划生育方案提供额外支持,以利用这一重要的服务渠道。
药店和药房为尼日利亚和肯尼亚城市地区的妇女扩大计划生育服务提供了一个重要且利用不足的机制,并且可能在其他地方也有类似的作用。脆弱和较难接触到的群体,如年轻、未婚的妇女和尚未生育的妇女,最有可能从增加在药店和药房获得计划生育服务中受益。