This analysis is based on the 2010 Demographic and Health Survey data from Burkina Faso. It summarizes key findings related to birth and pregnancy spacing, fertility return, unmet need for and use of family planning, and contact with key services for women during the period from the last birth through two years postpartum. Attachment Size Burkina-PPFP.pdf 270.76 KB
Family Planning Needs During the First Two Years Postpartum
These seven reports — from Burkina Faso, Ghana, Madagascar, Mozambique, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda — are based on Demographic and Health Survey data summarizing key findings related to birth and pregnancy spacing, fertility return, unmet need for and use of family planning, and contact with key services for women during the period from the last birth through two years postpartum.
Lessons Learned from the Scale-Up Experience of Six High-Impact Interventions in Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health
One of MCHIP’s cross-cutting themes was to support governments to bring high-impact health interventions to scale. This review draws on 18 case studies involving MCHIP support to scale up six health interventions. The research team conducted desk reviews for each case study based on project documents and published and gray literature, supplemented by in-country teams’ self-assessments of progress in institutionalizing …
PPIUD Services: Start-Up to Scale-Up Regional Meeting Burkina Faso
MCHIP and Population Services International’s Support for International Family Planning Organization program (with funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development) convened a regional meeting in West Africa to bring together international and regional experts to advance integration of postpartum intrauterine device services into maternal health services. This meeting report covers the event, which took place in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, …
A Documentation of Malaria Program Implementation in Burkina Faso
In collaboration with the National Malaria Control Program of Burkina Faso, MCHIP documented the status of malaria program implementation by all partners in the country. This report describes best practices/strategies that have supported malaria programming successes, as well as existing bottlenecks in malaria program implementation and recommends how these could be overcome. Available in English and French.