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Contraceptives reach rural women through pioneering system

Midwife Nan Win Phyu at the Nam Khoke Rural Health Centre uses a family planning wheel to explain contraceptive options. © UNFPA Myanmar/Si Thu Soe Moe
  • 31 July 2017

NAM KHOKE VILLAGE, Myanmar – Nan Aye Aye Lwin walked for three hours to reach the Nam Khoke Rural Health Centre. When she arrived, in the late afternoon, the anxiety was apparent on her face.

She has two children, she told the clinic’s midwife, and does not want more, at least not now. But she was worried she could not afford contraceptives. Her husband is a seasonal labourer, and money is tight, she explained.

The midwife told her not to worry. She patiently explained the contraceptive options available, and then gave her the good news: “It is free,” Nan Aye Aye Lwin told UNFPA after the consultation. “No need to pay.”

Women in remote areas of Myanmar now have improved access to contraceptives. © UNFPA Myanmar/Si Thu Soe Moe

And the news got even better: She would no longer have to trek for a total of six hours just to access contraceptives. “I am also told that from now on I can get it regularly in my home when the mobile health team visits my village.”

“We can now start family planning,” Nan Aye Aye Lwin said. “It is very good for us.”

A welcome change

Contraceptives can go a long way towards improving women’s health and lifting their families out of poverty.

By helping women avoid unintended pregnancies, family planning limits the incidence of dangerous pregnancy-related complications. And maternal death remains a significant issue in Myanmar, where an estimated 178 women die per every 100,000 live births, according to UN data. (Other estimates show even worse rates: A 2015-2016 survey showed 227 deaths per 100,000 live births.)

Family planning also enables women to stay in school or the workforce, improving their families’ economic prospects – critical for Myanmar’s rural poor.

Yet contraceptives have been unavailable to many women in the country. According to the 2015-2016 survey, "16 per cent of currently married women have an unmet need for family planning."

Much of this was because of poor inventory and stocking systems. Family planning supplies would sit in warehouses or overstocked health facilities, while other clinics, especially those in rural areas, would go without.

But there has recently been a welcome change.

Meeting real-world needs

Last year, UNFPA worked with the Myanmar government and John Snow, Inc. to release a new logistics system, which helps manage the procurement, storage and inventory of reproductive health supplies.

Senior midwife Daw Kyu Kyu Thin and her colleagues at the Nam Khoke Rural Health Centre review their stocks of reproductive health supplies. © UNFPA Myanmar/Si Thu Soe Moe

Every time a contraceptive, or other reproductive health product, is dispensed, it is entered into the system. At the township level, the system is online. At rural health centres, where internet is often inaccessible, the inventory is kept on paper, then reported to the township. This system enables township facilities to reallocate stock to where it is needed most.

“This gives us a lot of flexibility in distributing and sharing resources,” said Dr. Maung Maung Thein, the township medical officer in Hopong. “When there is need in one facility, we can easily identify surplus stock, and arrange for transfers.”

The system also gives special attention to remote health facilities. For example, it ensures there will be enough stock to last through the rainy season in places where transportation is limited by the weather.

Improving overall care

By the end of 2016, the system was expanded to 72 townships in six states. Over 4,000 health staff had been trained to use it.

UNFPA is now monitoring and evaluating the system’s progress. Since the programme was piloted in 2014, the percentage of adequately stocked health facilities has increased from 4 to 39 in townships with the new system. Stock-outs have decreased from 50 per cent to 20 per cent.

By 2018, the system will cover the entire country.

Senior midwife Daw Kyu Kyu Thin explained that the change has improved the care she provides in a variety of ways. “Field health staff spend much less time in tracking and entering the records. We can now do more mobile clinic visits,” she said.

And it has also improved the availability of all kinds of reproductive health medicines and supplies.

“We consistently have enough stock of the [contraceptive] injection, as well as of other medicines for pregnant women and mothers, to bring with us,” she added.

 

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