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Facts And Happenings In Our Countries And The World At Large

Tuesday, 2 February 2016

Nigeria Tops List Of Countries Providing Contraceptives

Nigeria provided 22 per cent of the contraceptives provided by the top 10 contraceptives providing countries  in 2013 and 2014. 

Out of a total of 8,153,431 contraceptives provided for the two years, Nigeria provided  3,873,115. 

In 2013, Africa’s most populous country provided 1,835,966 contraceptives, a figure that increased to 2,037,149 in 2014 according to data released by the Family Planning 2020, FP2020, at the just concluded 4th International Conference on Family Planning, ICFP 2016,  held in Nusa Dua, Indonesia.
 
Other countries among the top 10 providers of contraceptives are: 

Democratic Republic of Congo
Vietnam
Ethiopia
Ghana
India
Malawi
Mali
Pakistan
Togo

The data was released just as the conference  closed with renewed calls from global leaders for increased action  to expand contraceptive access and options for  family planning services to additional 120 million women by 2020.

Over 3,000 participants attended the historic conference organised around the theme “Global Commitments, Local Actions”  even as the IPPF  has already reached 15 million new users and increased their total family planning clients by 40 percent since 2012. As part of the FP2020 commitment, Nigeria pledged to provide additional US$8.35m annually until 2016 for reproductive health commodities.

Further, government pledged to improve equity and access to family planning for women with lowest socioeconomic status, including promoting policy formulation and actions that support maternal and child health. Programmatically, Nigeria committed to training more community health workers to deliver the range of contraceptives in rural areas

Data from the National  family planning core indicator 2014-15, showed that the number of additional users of modern methods of contraception rose from 194,000 with a contraceptive prevalence rate, modern methods (mCPR) 10.5 percent in 2013 to 667,000 and 11.4 percent mCPR in 2014. In 2015 the figure rose to 1,064,000 (12.1 percent). Nigeria’s ambitious FP2020 commitment, includes the goal of raising the contraceptive prevalence rate, CPR, among married women from 15-36 percent by 2018.

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