Abstract

Performance Monitoring and Accountability 2020 (PMA2020) is a population-based and facility-based survey program conducted in 11 countries to track contraceptive use dynamics and the supply environment. Annual data collection provides trend data unavailable from any other source. Two-stage cluster sampling was used to select 58 enumeration areas in Kinshasa; data were collected in 2014, 2015 and 2016 from three to six service delivery points (SDPs) per EA. Of the 228–248 SDPs surveyed each year, only two-thirds reported to offer family planning (FP) services. Of those reporting to offer FP, one-fifth or more did not do so on the day of the survey. As of 2016, only one-half of SDPs offering FP had at least three methods available, a proxy for contraceptive choice; only one in five had at least five methods. Long-acting reversible contraceptives, including implants and IUDs, were less widely offered and more often stocked out than resupply methods, including condoms, pills and injectables. Contraceptive stockouts were rampant: in 2016, over a quarter of the SDPs experienced stockouts of all methods (except condoms) in the previous 3 months, and two of the three most widely used methods—implants and injectables—were also the most likely to be stocked out. The findings documented the inconsistency in pricing of methods across facilities; moreover, less than one quarter of SDPs posted prices. Patterns in the contraceptive supply environment remained relatively unchanged between 2014 and 2016. The PMA2020 SDP module provides timely, actionable information to the DRC government, FP implementing organizations and donors involved in FP service delivery in Kinshasa, DRC. Yet the value of this information will be determined by the ability of the local FP stakeholders to use it in bringing the needed improvements identified by this survey to the contraceptive supply environment.

Highlights

  • With one of the world’s largest (83 million) and most rapidly growing populations, the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is focused intently on future population growth and its implications

  • The percentage of service delivery points (SDPs) that report NOT offering family planning (FP) services reflects the magnitude of opportunity for introducing FP in existing health facilities

  • What do the Performance Monitoring and Accountability 2020 (PMA2020) SDP data tell us about the performance of FP service delivery in Kinshasa over the past 3 years (2014–16)? These data provide a rare opportunity to track the supply of contraceptives in an environment with rapid population growth

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Summary

Introduction

With one of the world’s largest (83 million) and most rapidly growing populations (at 3.1% per annum), the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is focused intently on future population growth and its implications. In its national strategic plan for family planning (FP), the DRC established the objective of increasing the modern contraceptive prevalence rate (MCPR) for all women of reproductive age to 19.0% by 2020 (Ministry of Health Democratic Republic of the Congo 2014). Developing an FP program characterized by high access and quality is a priority for the government, donors, and FP implementing agencies working in Kinshasa. MCPR among women married or in union in Kinshasa has increased over the past 4 years, from 18.5% (in 2013) to 23.8% in 2016 (Performance Monitoring and Accounability 2020 [PMA2020] 2014, 2015, 2016a).

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