TY - JOUR
T1 - The case for investing in family planning in the Pacific
T2 - Costs and benefits of reducing unmet need for contraception in Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands
AU - Kennedy, Elissa C.
AU - Mackesy-Buckley, Sean
AU - Subramaniam, Sumi
AU - Demmke, Andreas
AU - Latu, Rufina
AU - Robertson, Annette Sachs
AU - Tiban, Kabwea
AU - Tokon, Apisai
AU - Luchters, Stanley
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Judith Seke (Solomon Islands Ministry of Health) and Arthur Jorari (Statistics and Demography Programme, Secretariat of the Pacific Community) for their advice on base-year data and assumptions included in the models. We also gratefully acknowledge the support of: John Stover, Bill Winfrey and Robert McKinnon (Futures Institute) for technical advice regarding Spectrum; Rachel Sacks-Davis and Maelenn Gouillou (Centre for Population Health, Burnet Institute) for advice regarding the methodology and analysis; Natalie Gray (Oxfam Australia) for contributions to the initial conceptualisation of this work; and Jane Hawtin (Burnet Institute) for design of the figures. This work has been funded by AusAID through Compass: Women's and Children's Health Knowledge Hub. Compass is a partnership between the Burnet Institute, Menzies School of Health Research and the Centre for International Child Health, University of Melbourne. The views represented here are not necessarily those of AusAID or the Australian Government. The authors gratefully acknowledge the contribution to this work of the Victorian Operational Infrastructure Support Program received by the Burnet Institute.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Background: Unmet need for family planning in the Pacific is among the highest in the world. Better understanding of required investments and associated benefits of increased access to family planning in the Pacific may assist prioritisation and funding. Methods. We modelled the costs and associated health, demographic and economic impacts of reducing unmet need for family planning between 2010-2025 in Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands. Baseline data were obtained from census reports, Demographic and Health Surveys, and UN agency reports. Using a demographic modelling program we compared a scenario of "no change in unmet need" with two distinct scenarios: 1) all family planning needs met by 2020; and, 2) all needs met by 2050. Results: Meeting family planning needs by 2020 would increase prevalence of modern contraception in 2025 from 36.8 to 65.5% in Vanuatu and 28.5 to 37.6% in the Solomon Islands. Between 2010-2025 the average annual number of unintended pregnancies would decline by 68% in Vanuatu and 50% in the Solomon Islands, and high-risk births would fall by more than 20%, averting 2,573 maternal and infant deaths. Total fertility rates would fall from 4.1 to 2.2 in Vanuatu and 3.5 in the Solomon Islands, contributing to slowed population growth and lower dependency ratios. The direct cost of reducing unmet need by 2020 was estimated to be $5.19 million for Vanuatu and $3.36 million for the Solomon Islands between 2010-2025. Preventing unintended pregnancies would save $112 million in health and education expenditure. Conclusions: In small island developing states such as Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands, increasing investment in family planning would contribute to improved maternal and infant outcomes and substantial public sector savings.
AB - Background: Unmet need for family planning in the Pacific is among the highest in the world. Better understanding of required investments and associated benefits of increased access to family planning in the Pacific may assist prioritisation and funding. Methods. We modelled the costs and associated health, demographic and economic impacts of reducing unmet need for family planning between 2010-2025 in Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands. Baseline data were obtained from census reports, Demographic and Health Surveys, and UN agency reports. Using a demographic modelling program we compared a scenario of "no change in unmet need" with two distinct scenarios: 1) all family planning needs met by 2020; and, 2) all needs met by 2050. Results: Meeting family planning needs by 2020 would increase prevalence of modern contraception in 2025 from 36.8 to 65.5% in Vanuatu and 28.5 to 37.6% in the Solomon Islands. Between 2010-2025 the average annual number of unintended pregnancies would decline by 68% in Vanuatu and 50% in the Solomon Islands, and high-risk births would fall by more than 20%, averting 2,573 maternal and infant deaths. Total fertility rates would fall from 4.1 to 2.2 in Vanuatu and 3.5 in the Solomon Islands, contributing to slowed population growth and lower dependency ratios. The direct cost of reducing unmet need by 2020 was estimated to be $5.19 million for Vanuatu and $3.36 million for the Solomon Islands between 2010-2025. Preventing unintended pregnancies would save $112 million in health and education expenditure. Conclusions: In small island developing states such as Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands, increasing investment in family planning would contribute to improved maternal and infant outcomes and substantial public sector savings.
KW - Adolescent Fertility
KW - Contraception
KW - Economic Development
KW - Family planning
KW - Infant Health
KW - Population
KW - Women's Health
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84878718061&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/1742-4755-10-30
DO - 10.1186/1742-4755-10-30
M3 - Article
C2 - 23758783
AN - SCOPUS:84878718061
SN - 1742-4755
VL - 10
JO - Reproductive Health
JF - Reproductive Health
IS - 1
M1 - 30
ER -