Abstract

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.

Highlights

  • The Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) initiative aims to expand access to family planning information, services, and supplies with the ambitious goal of increasing the number of new family planning users by 120 million women and girls by 2020.1 This initiative builds upon the wider ongoing global movement toward reproductive rights and universal access toRole of Drug Shops and Pharmacies for Family Planning www.ghspjournal.org sexual and reproductive health services, as seen in the recent Sustainable Development Goals.[2]As focus countries of the FP2020 initiative, Nigeria and Kenya made commitments to improve access to family planning at the London Summit on Family Planning in 2012

  • 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

  • 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

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Summary

Introduction

The Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) initiative aims to expand access to family planning information, services, and supplies with the ambitious goal of increasing the number of new family planning users by 120 million women and girls by 2020.1 This initiative builds upon the wider ongoing global movement toward reproductive rights and universal access toRole of Drug Shops and Pharmacies for Family Planning www.ghspjournal.org sexual and reproductive health services, as seen in the recent Sustainable Development Goals.[2]As focus countries of the FP2020 initiative, Nigeria and Kenya made commitments to improve access to family planning at the London Summit on Family Planning in 2012. In 2014, 53% of currently married women ages 15–49 were using modern contraceptive methods; this is an increase of 21 percentage points from 2003 and 14 percentage points from 2008–09.7,8 Unmet need was 18% in 2014, suggesting continued demand for family planning even in the context of higher use. In both Nigeria and Kenya in the most recent Demographic and Health Surveys, most of the method use is comprised of shorter-acting methods, such as injectable contraceptives, condoms, and oral contraceptive pills, rather than longacting reversible contraceptives (LARCs) or sterilization. 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

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