Condom Distribution in the Philippines

February 28, 2010 at 4:12 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment
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In spite of conservative opposition, especially from the Catholic Church, the Philippines’ Department of Health (DoH) continues giving away condoms, or prophylactics to “people who need them” to help prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Other DoH strategies include education of the youth, workers, Filipinos overseas, as well as tourists and transients who visit the country. The DoH head said they would tap stand-by funds provided by international agencies, as in the 2010 DOH budget, no funds were appropriated by Congress for the procurement of condoms.

Read the full article at the Philippine News’ website.

Advancing Healthy Advocacy for RH

January 28, 2010 at 1:20 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment
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Capacity-Building for NGOs in Africa and Asia

In partnership with Equilibres et Populations, DSW conducted its last of four capacity-building regional workshops of the AHEAD project in Burkina Faso in January. The four AHEAD workshops aimed at increasing the capacity more than 50 civil society organizations in four regions in Africa and Asia to advocate effectively for greater national support to reproductive health in the new aid architecture. The main outcomes of the workshops are the country based advocacy action plans that the participants from each country developed and will implement from 2010 onwards.
At the West African workhop in January, DSW trained 16 participants from Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal, and Niger on how to affect the policy and budgeting processes of their national governments to increase funding for reproductive health. Speakers included representatives of the AAFPPD (Forum of African and Arab Parliamentarians on Population and Development), the World Bank, and UNFPA. For more information on the AHEAD project, visit DSWs website.

PAI Paper on Aid Effectiveness

October 6, 2009 at 12:18 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment
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A npailogo2ew working paper, entitled ‘Making Aid Effectiveness Work for Family Planning and Reproductive Health’, and released by Population Action International (PAI), analyzes  principles of aid effectiveness from a family planning and reproductive health perspective. It also describes how the Paris Declaration has changed the ways of managing and delivering aid, highlights entry points and obstacles for champions working to improve funding and policies, and makes recommendations for civil society organizations, governments and donors.

To get the paper please visit the PAI website.

EU surpasses US as Top Donor in Population Assistance

September 2, 2009 at 11:33 am | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment
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DSW and EPF remind European policy-makers of their commitments to Family Planning and Reproductive Health

Brussels, 1 September 2009. The collective efforts of the European Union (EU) have made it  the single greatest donor of population assistance worldwide, as a joint study of the German Foundation for World Population (DSW) and the European Parliamentary Forum on Population and Development (EPF) shows. According to the Euromapping 2009 report, in 2006 the EU spent nearly US$ 3 billion on population programmes and activities, increasing its aid by US$ 600 million. The US decreased its aid by nearly the same amount. To meet international commitments to provide universal access to reproductive health by 2015, donors must triple their financial support for population activities over the next four years.

At the Euromapping Press Conference, DSW Vice-Executive Director Karen Hoehn, welcomed this increasing trend in EU spending, but called on European governments to live up to their commitments to family planning and reproductive health made at the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD): “The financial crisis will impact developing countries most severely; sustaining European support for ODA and population assistance is therefore imperative”. There are already worrying signs of dramatic cuts in official development assistance in 2009, noted Neil Datta, Secretary of EPF: “Given the leading position of the EU in the world, with 63% of the total ODA contributions, a failure to meet its targets will deliver a worrying message to the donor community in the run-up to 2015″.

At the same time, the Euromapping report finds that EU spending towards the health sector on the whole has decreased. “There is a direct link between maternal mortality rates and the lack of well-functioning health systems,” argued Susanne Weber-Mosdorf, Head of the EU office of the WHO, at the Euromapping press conference. “With this reduction, European donors save money at the very wrong end—and miss out on sustainable solutions”.

Despite the positive efforts of other international actors, the EU’s reduction marked a drop in global health spending, jeopardising international efforts to meet the Millennium Development Goals. With the Committee on Development of the European Parliament discussing the 2010 budget this week, MEP Ms. Sophie in’t Veld called on her colleagues to live up to the commitments made on reproductive health and population issues: “We have to step up our political and financial support for the fifth Millennium Development Goal on maternal health,” said Ms. in’t Veld. “Let’s not abandon those who are dying needlessly in childbirth every day, but show them our continuing support especially in times of crisis”.

More information, graphic material and the Euromapping study report in English, French and German are available online at:
http://www.euroresources.org/euromapping

ICAAP: Donors Meet to Talk about HIV and SRHR Linkages

August 27, 2009 at 9:30 am | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment
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Participants at a satellite meeting during the 9th International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific agreed that programs, policies and funding for HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights are disconnected, and discussed practical ways to integrate services and maximize limited resources.

The meeting featured a panel of representatives from donors and NGOs who spoke on effective ways to link sexual and reproductive health and rights and HIV. A key message from the session was that sexual and reproductive health and rights are essential to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support.

The meeting was hosted by the Asia Pacific Alliance (APA) and UNFPA. Moderated by Elisha Dunn-Georgiou (from Population Action International, an APA member based in Washington), the meeting was well-attended with more than 120 civil society representatives taking part in a dialogue with key donors working in Asia and the Pacific: the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Australian government aid agency (AusAID), the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Sweden’s International Development Agency (SIDA).

Many of the panelists spoke of the value that linkages and integration can add to HIV programming when dealing with ‘overlapping identities’. With HIV prevalence across the region largely concentrated among sex workers, injecting drug users and men who have sex with men, more integrated services can ensure people from overlapping and vulnerable population groups do not miss out on essential sexual and reproductive health services.

Panelists noted that integration was not a cure-all for challenges in Asia and the Pacific and that linkages sometimes increased burdens on health systems. All the speakers reinforced the need for responses to be driven by country-level and grassroots needs. ‘Knowing your epidemic’ remained crucial, and all interventions need to be evidence-based.

Dr Robyn Biti, a Canberra-based HIV adviser for the Australian government aid agency, AusAID, said her agency had launched a new HIV strategy earlier in 2009. One of the six priorities in the policy encouraged was the integration of HIV into other health services, such as sexual and reproductive health, maternal and child health and chronic disease management.

AusAID is supporting work to integrate HIV into broader sexual and reproductive health services, particularly in Pacific Island countries, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia. Dr Biti said AusAID was soon to release new guidelines on family planning and reproductive health and said that it was important that sexual health is not just viewed through a HIV lens.

Dr Biti said that a priority recognized in AusAID’s new HIV policy was encouraging policy change and legal reform to create a better enabling environment in Asia-Pacific countries for HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health and rights.

Rikard Elfving, HIV adviser for the Asian Development Bank, said it remained important to address synergies between HIV and SRHR, particularly in ADB’s support to health systems and HIV to ensure funding is most cost-effective. For the ADB, health is a second-tier priority. But the ADB works to support the implementation of HIV and gender in the planning and construction of major infrastructure projects in developing countries.

Anurita Bains, a senior adviser from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria said with the economic climate and declining resources money needs to be invested smartly. Integration makes sense and is more effective, Ms Bains said. However, with the Global Fund’s country-driven application process, the need for integration needed to be clearly demonstrated at the country level.

Ms Bains said less than 20 percent of applications received by the Global Fund incorporated sexual and reproductive health and rights. The Global Fund remains committed to supporting civil society participation in the preparation of its proposals and in the implementation of activities.

Providing a civil society perspective, Sonal Mehta from the India HIV/AIDS Alliance said that linkages between sexual and reproductive health and right and HIV were obvious and common in many programs, but often donor policies made this more difficult.

Dr Michael Tan from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation noted that sexual and reproductive health and rights was not just a program but an approach. The essential rights component to programmes for HIV and sexual and reproductive health was often overlooked. Dr Tan said the Packard Foundation was developing a new strategy for population issues in light of the financial crisis. The Packard Foundation is preparing to scale back activities in Asia and the Pacific and will soon withdraw from the Philippines. The Packard Foundation would maintain a support base in South Asia.

Tomas Lundstrom, HIV Adviser from the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA), said his agency was also looking to scale back funding in Asia and the Pacific, and that this was a trend for many European donors in the current economic climate. SIDA would still focus on encouraging democracy and human rights at a regional and global level, and would also expand its work around climate change.

When it comes to HIV and sexual and reproductive health in Asia and the Pacific, rights remained critical, Mr Lundstrom noted. Preventing HIV and programs for sexual and reproductive health and rights were often the same thing, and that Mr Lundstrom said he was always surprised there was so much fragmentation between the two areas.

Following the Global Fund’s lead, Mr Lundstrom said many donors were now taking more of a ‘back-seat’ position, and developing countries are increasingly encouraged to set their own plans, mindful of national contexts, priorities and capacities within individual health systems.

Several audience participants stressed the importance of rights in preventing HIV and in improving sexual and reproductive health and rights. A question was asked about what donors were doing to help remove legal and policy barriers in developing countries. The panelists, particularly bilateral donors, noted that while interventions focused on changing policy and promoting rights were very important, it was often hard to do as diplomatic partners.

Dr Chaiyos Kanunasont, HIV Adviser for UNFPA‘s regional office in Bangkok, said that government agencies, donors and civil society share one point of common ground, the need for good results and quality programs that reach people in need. Linking HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights is the best way to optimise resources and deliver a comprehensive package of health services.

For more information please contact Damian Facciolo at APA.

IPPF report ‘Contraceptives at a Crossroads’

July 29, 2009 at 2:41 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment
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ippflogo1IPPF recently launched a report entitled “Contraceptives at a Crossroads”. The report states that because of stalling on political and financial commitments hard won gains regarding contraceptive security in many parts of the world are at risk of being lost. The authors furthermore point out that the increasing demand for contraceptives, especially in developing countries, will not be met as long as the problems that prevent reproductive health supplies from being funded, developed, manufactured, and delivered to those who need them, are not understood. The aim of the report is “to synthesize the vast array of issues, structures, players and processes that impact whether women and men can access thereproductive health services that they need and want, when and where they need them, and to provide recommendations on moving forward“.

A pdf-version of the report can be found at the IPPF website

March SupplyNews released

March 27, 2009 at 1:37 pm | Posted in SupplyNews | Leave a comment
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SupplyNews#11 has been released . To access the PDF please click here.

SupplyNews focuses on activities and news related to advocacy and awareness raising. SupplyNews is a one-stop-shop to get the latest on advocacy at the global, regional, and country level. More than that, it gives access to essential resources. Finally, SupplyNews is a platform to share updates around commodity security advocacy!

This month’s SupplyNews contains

News from the Project RMA:
RH Supplies Advocacy on District Level in Tanzania

FPI explores RH Supplies Situation in Pacific

Supplies news:
Pope Says Condoms Worsen HIV Problem

RHInterchange (RHI) Update

Obama Reverses Bush Ban on Contraceptive Supplies to MSI

Restoring Funding to UNFPA

Australian Funded Condoms ‘Wasted’ In Papua New Guinea

RH Supplies on the Prequalification Agenda

FC2 Female Condom Obtained FDA-Approval

Female Condom Shortage in Kenya

Focus on:
Greenstar Pakistan Stock Out

Look out for:
Stop Stock-outs; Civil Society Meeting Preceding Global Fund Donors Meeting

If you would like to receive the SupplyNews, please write to Caroline Jane Kent or Martin Kuehn at DSW.

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