Division of Reproductive Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2020 Nov;29(11):1372-1380. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2020.8813.
The Zika Contraception Access Network (Z-CAN) program was a short-term emergency response intervention that used contraception to prevent unintended pregnancies to reduce Zika-related adverse birth outcomes during the 2016-2017 Zika virus outbreak in Puerto Rico. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that a collaborative and coordinated response was needed from governments and private-sector partners to improve access to contraception during the Zika outbreak in Puerto Rico. In response, the National Foundation for the CDC, with technical assistance from CDC, established the Z-CAN program, a network of 153-trained physicians, that provided client-centered contraceptive counseling and same-day access to the full range of the Food and Drug Administration-approved reversible contraceptive methods at no cost for women who chose to prevent pregnancy. From May 2016 to September 2017, 29,221 women received Z-CAN services. Through Z-CAN, public-private partnerships provided a broad range of opportunities for partners to come together to leverage technical expertise, experience, and resources to remove barriers to access contraception that neither the public nor the private sector could address alone. Public-private partnerships focused on three areas: (1) the coordination of efforts among federal and territorial agencies to align strategies, leverage resources, and address sustainability; (2) the mobilization of private partnerships to secure resources from private corporations, domestic philanthropic organizations, and nonprofit organizations for contraceptive methods, physician reimbursement, training and proctoring resources, infrastructure costs, and a health communications campaign; and (3) the engagement of key stakeholders to understand context and need, and to identify strategies to reach the target population. Public-private partnerships provided expertise, support, and awareness, and could be used to help guide programs to other settings for which access to contraception could improve health outcomes.
寨卡避孕接入网络(Z-CAN)计划是一项短期应急干预措施,利用避孕措施来预防意外怀孕,以减少波多黎各 2016-2017 年寨卡病毒爆发期间与寨卡相关的不良生育结局。疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)报告称,需要政府和私营部门合作伙伴共同协调应对,以改善波多黎各寨卡疫情期间的避孕措施获取。为此,国家疾病控制与预防中心基金会在疾病控制与预防中心的技术援助下,建立了 Z-CAN 计划,这是一个由 153 名经过培训的医生组成的网络,为选择避孕的妇女提供以客户为中心的避孕咨询和当天获得食品和药物管理局批准的所有可逆避孕方法,不收取任何费用。从 2016 年 5 月到 2017 年 9 月,共有 29221 名妇女接受了 Z-CAN 服务。通过 Z-CAN,公私合作伙伴关系为合作伙伴提供了广泛的机会,使他们能够共同利用技术专长、经验和资源,消除公共部门和私营部门都无法单独解决的避孕措施获取障碍。公私合作伙伴关系侧重于三个领域:(1)协调联邦和领土机构之间的努力,以协调战略、利用资源和解决可持续性问题;(2)动员私人合作伙伴关系,从私营公司、国内慈善组织和非营利组织为避孕方法、医生报销、培训和指导资源、基础设施成本以及健康传播活动获取资源;(3)让关键利益攸关方参与进来,了解背景和需求,并确定针对目标人群的策略。公私合作伙伴关系提供了专门知识、支持和认识,并可用于帮助指导其他需要改善避孕措施获取以改善健康结局的环境中的项目。