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USAID Family Planning Program: A History of Achievement

  • Since USAID’s family planning program began in 1965, the average number of children per family in the developing world (excluding China) has dropped from six to four.

  • USAID provides 35 – 40 percent of donor-provided contraceptives to the developing world and supplies nearly 30 family planning programs in 20 countries with technical and logistical support.

  • Contraceptive use has increased in many parts of the world. In Brazil, a country that has “graduated” from USAID family planning assistance, contraceptive use exceeds the 50 percent mark.

  • USAID supports the Demographic and Health Surveys, the world’s largest survey research effort. Since 1972, results from more than 70 countries have revolutionized our understanding of family planning and health dynamics.

  • Support for safer and more effective family planning methods has brought many technical advances, including natural family planning methods, improved oral contraceptives, barrier methods, and NORPLANTĒ.

  • USAID works to improve contraceptive security. Contraceptive security exists when every person is able to choose, obtain, and use high-quality contraceptives whenever she or he wants them.

  • To increase access to family planning services, USAID introduced such innovations as door-to-door distribution, mobile clinic services, and employee-based health care programs.

  • USAID programs have trained networks of midwives, healers, and traditional birth attendants to provide family planning services. These networks increase the quality of family planning services and their availability.

  • Private-sector initiatives have expanded contraceptive social marketing, pursued joint projects with commercial providers, worked with media and entertainment industries in communication campaigns, and encouraged employers to include family planning in health benefits packages.

  • USAID helps governments review policies, restrictive or nonessential regulations, and product bans that are barriers to private-sector involvement in offering family planning services.

Learn more about USAID’s Family Planning Program Timeline

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