Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach

Family planning (FP) program contributed to Egypt s progress in reducing infant and maternal mortality and the total fertility and population growth rates. The Arab spring has brought to the forefront long-held aspirations, which can only be fulfil...

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Main Authors: Rabie, Tamer, Boehmova, Zuzana, Hawkins, Loraine, Tawab, Nahla Abdel, Saher, Sally, El Shitany, Atef
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/07/20204671/transforming-family-planning-outlook-practice-egypt-rights-based-approach
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20418
id okr-10986-20418
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-204182021-04-23T14:03:55Z Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach Rabie, Tamer Boehmova, Zuzana Hawkins, Loraine Tawab, Nahla Abdel Saher, Sally El Shitany, Atef FAMILY PLANNING FERTILITY RATE HUMAN RIGHTS INFANT AND MATERNAL MORTALITY LEGAL AND ETHICAL CODES POPULATION GROWTH RATE QUALITY SERVICES ACCESS REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS Family planning (FP) program contributed to Egypt s progress in reducing infant and maternal mortality and the total fertility and population growth rates. The Arab spring has brought to the forefront long-held aspirations, which can only be fulfilled by a clear shift to a rights-based and person-centered family planning approach and away from an imposed top-down program with targets for family size and fertility rate. The essence of a rights-based approach to FP is interacting with people as individuals with rights to control ones lives, not as a target of a particular program. The FP program also needs to determine and mitigate the factors that make it difficult for the poor, young, and marginalized groups to exercise rights to receive the services needed. The authors of this report examined the challenges facing Egypt s FP program through a human rights lens, exploring whether individuals and couples are able to exercise their rights to financial and physical access to good quality FP services. The research also investigated whether client demand for services, and the acceptability of those services, is guided by human rights aspects of service delivery, such as the rights to information, privacy, confidentiality, method choice, and the autonomy to choose the number and spacing of births. This report synthesizes the findings from three sources: (i) an analysis of legal and ethical codes and institutions for upholding reproductive rights in Egypt; (ii) a literature review of past studies and surveys in Egypt; and (iii) a field study in four governorates, using quantitative and qualitative methods to assess the accessibility and quality of FP services in family health units; the views of clients through in exit interviews; and the views of community members in focus group discussions with married women, husbands, and mothers-in-law on perception of FP, the quality of services, and service responsiveness to their needs. This study reconfirmed the need to focus on redressing staff turnover in rural primary health care (PHC) facilities, as well as improving the qualifications and skills of existing staff, both key constraints to quality improvement. 2014-10-14T13:56:17Z 2014-10-14T13:56:17Z 2013-07-16 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/07/20204671/transforming-family-planning-outlook-practice-egypt-rights-based-approach http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20418 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research Middle East and North Africa Egypt, Arab Republic of
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic FAMILY PLANNING
FERTILITY RATE
HUMAN RIGHTS
INFANT AND MATERNAL MORTALITY
LEGAL AND ETHICAL CODES
POPULATION GROWTH RATE
QUALITY SERVICES ACCESS
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
spellingShingle FAMILY PLANNING
FERTILITY RATE
HUMAN RIGHTS
INFANT AND MATERNAL MORTALITY
LEGAL AND ETHICAL CODES
POPULATION GROWTH RATE
QUALITY SERVICES ACCESS
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
Rabie, Tamer
Boehmova, Zuzana
Hawkins, Loraine
Tawab, Nahla Abdel
Saher, Sally
El Shitany, Atef
Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Egypt, Arab Republic of
description Family planning (FP) program contributed to Egypt s progress in reducing infant and maternal mortality and the total fertility and population growth rates. The Arab spring has brought to the forefront long-held aspirations, which can only be fulfilled by a clear shift to a rights-based and person-centered family planning approach and away from an imposed top-down program with targets for family size and fertility rate. The essence of a rights-based approach to FP is interacting with people as individuals with rights to control ones lives, not as a target of a particular program. The FP program also needs to determine and mitigate the factors that make it difficult for the poor, young, and marginalized groups to exercise rights to receive the services needed. The authors of this report examined the challenges facing Egypt s FP program through a human rights lens, exploring whether individuals and couples are able to exercise their rights to financial and physical access to good quality FP services. The research also investigated whether client demand for services, and the acceptability of those services, is guided by human rights aspects of service delivery, such as the rights to information, privacy, confidentiality, method choice, and the autonomy to choose the number and spacing of births. This report synthesizes the findings from three sources: (i) an analysis of legal and ethical codes and institutions for upholding reproductive rights in Egypt; (ii) a literature review of past studies and surveys in Egypt; and (iii) a field study in four governorates, using quantitative and qualitative methods to assess the accessibility and quality of FP services in family health units; the views of clients through in exit interviews; and the views of community members in focus group discussions with married women, husbands, and mothers-in-law on perception of FP, the quality of services, and service responsiveness to their needs. This study reconfirmed the need to focus on redressing staff turnover in rural primary health care (PHC) facilities, as well as improving the qualifications and skills of existing staff, both key constraints to quality improvement.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
author Rabie, Tamer
Boehmova, Zuzana
Hawkins, Loraine
Tawab, Nahla Abdel
Saher, Sally
El Shitany, Atef
author_facet Rabie, Tamer
Boehmova, Zuzana
Hawkins, Loraine
Tawab, Nahla Abdel
Saher, Sally
El Shitany, Atef
author_sort Rabie, Tamer
title Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach
title_short Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach
title_full Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach
title_fullStr Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach
title_full_unstemmed Transforming Family Planning Outlook and Practice in Egypt : A Rights-Based Approach
title_sort transforming family planning outlook and practice in egypt : a rights-based approach
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/07/20204671/transforming-family-planning-outlook-practice-egypt-rights-based-approach
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20418
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