Abstract

This article draws from national surveys of every sub-Saharan African country with at least 1 recent survey published between 2015 and 2017 and 2 prior surveys from 2003 to 2014. Twelve countries comprising over 60% of the region's population met these inclusion criteria. The analysis considers recent and longer-term changes in 3 key variables: modern contraceptive prevalence rate (mCPR), method-specific prevalence, and a method's share of the current modern method mix. As recently as 2011, implant CPR in sub-Saharan Africa was only 1.1%. Since then, sizeable price reductions, much-increased commodity supply, greater government commitment to rights-based family planning, broader WHO eligibility guidance, and wider adoption of high-impact service delivery practices have resulted in expanded client access and marked increases in implant prevalence and share of the method mix. Ten of the 12 countries now have an implant CPR around 6% or higher, with 3 countries above 11%. Increased implant use has been the main driver of the increased mCPR attained by 11 countries, with gains in implant use alone exceeding combined gains in use of injectables, pills, and intrauterine devices. In countries as diverse as Burkina Faso and Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ghana, Kenya and Senegal, implant use now accounts for one-fourth to one-half of all modern method use. Implants have become the first or second most widely used method in 10 countries. In the 7 countries with multiple surveys conducted over a 2- to 3-year span between 2013-14 and 2016-17, average annual gains in implant prevalence range from 0.97 to 4.15 percentage points; this contrasts to historical annual gains in use of all modern methods of 0.70 percentage points in 42 sub-Saharan African countries from 1986 to 2008. Implant use has risen substantially and fairly equitably across almost all sociodemographic categories, including unmarried women, women of lower and higher parity, women in all 5 wealth quintiles, younger and older women, and women residing in rural areas. A notable exception is the category of nulliparous married women, whose implant use is mostly below 1%. These attainments represent a major success story not often seen in family planning programming. With continued program commitment and donor support, these trends in implant uptake and popularity are likely to continue for the next few years. This implies even greater need for the international family planning community to maintain its focus on rights-based programming, ensuring reliable access to implant removal as well as insertion services, and addressing issues of financing and sustainability.

Highlights

  • This programmatic review and analysis highlights the marked uptake of contraceptive implants that has been occurring in much of sub-Saharan Africa over the past several years

  • This article draws from 2 sources of representative national population data: Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Performance Monitoring and Accountability 2020 (PMA2020) surveys.[4,5]

  • It analyzes recent changes in contraceptive use and method mix among married women and sexually active unmarried women in every sub-Saharan African country meeting 3 inclusion criteria: 1. At least 1 DHS or PMA2020 survey was conducted in the country between 2015 and 2017

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Summary

Introduction

This programmatic review and analysis highlights the marked uptake of contraceptive implants that has been occurring in much of sub-Saharan Africa over the past several years. Implants have many attractive features, including convenience, very high effectiveness, and long duration of action, they had been marginal methods for many years in family planning programs, largely because of high commodity cost—. As recently as 2011, the contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) for implants in sub-Saharan Africa was only 1.1% among married women, including 0.6% in Western Africa, 0.3% in Middle Africa, and 0.1% in Southern Africa.[1] Use of implants among sexually active unmarried women was likely even lower. In the subsequent few years, the situation has been changing greatly for implants in terms of overall use; use by women in almost all sociodemographic categories; share of the method mix; and contribution to countries' gains in the modern contraceptive prevalence rate (mCPR) and achievement of Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) goals.

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