| Literature DB >> 23758783 |
Elissa C Kennedy1, Sean Mackesy-Buckley, Sumi Subramaniam, Andreas Demmke, Rufina Latu, Annette Sachs Robertson, Kabwea Tiban, Apisai Tokon, Stanley Luchters.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23758783 PMCID: PMC3700798 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4755-10-30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Key population, reproductive health, and economic estimates for the base year (2010) for Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands
| Population size (number) [ | 239,000 | 515,970 |
| Annual population growth rate (%) [ | 2.3 | 2.6 |
| Total fertility rate [ | 4.1 | 4.1 |
| Adolescent fertility rate (births per 1000 women aged 15–19) [ | 66 | 62 |
| Proportion of women aged 15–49 married or in union (%) [ | 65 | 61 |
| Median months postpartum insusceptibility (months) [ | 11 | 11 |
| Proportion of unwanted pregnancies ending in induced abortion (%) [ | 33 | 33 |
| Proportion of women aged 45–49 who have never given birth (%) [ | 7 | 7 |
| Contraceptive prevalence rate, all methods (%) [ | 38 | 35 |
| Contraceptive prevalence rate, modern methods (%) [ | 37 | 27 |
| Proportion of women aged 15–49 and married or in union with unmet need for family planning (%) [ | 30 | 11 |
| Proportion of births with any avoidable risk† (%) [ | 55 | 55 |
| Maternal mortality ratio (deaths per 100,000 live births) [ | 110 | 162 |
| Infant mortality rate (deaths per 1000 live births) [ | 21 | 23 |
| Gross domestic product per capita (US$) [ | 2,526 | 1,147 |
| Annual expenditure per primary student (US$) [ | 363 | 192 |
| Annual expenditure per secondary student (US$) [ | 1,146 | 462 |
| Annual health expenditure per capita (US$) [ | 104 | 72 |
† Births to women aged <18 or >34 years; births spaced <24 months apart; birth order 4 or more.
Projected outcomes by 2025 for contraceptive use and fertility for the baseline model (constant unmet need) and two scenarios (all needs met by 2020 and all needs met by 2050) in Vanuatu and Solomon Islands
| Total contraceptive users (all methods) | 21,425 | 34,599 | 38,164 | 34,353 | 42,949 | 45,275 |
| Contraceptive prevalence rate (all methods) % | 38.4 | 62.0 | 68.4 | 34.6 | 43.3 | 45.6 |
| Contraceptive prevalence rate (modern methods) % | 36.8 | 59.4 | 65.5 | 28.5 | 35.7 | 37.6 |
| Contraceptive prevalence rate (long-acting or permanent) % | 12.8 | 20.6 | 22.8 | 16.3 | 20.4 | 21.5 |
| Total fertility rate | 4.0 | 2.6 | 2.2 | 4.1 | 3.7 | 3.5 |
| Adolescent fertility rate (births per 1000 females aged 15–19) | 59.1 | 37.8 | 32.2 | 56.8 | 50.6 | 48.9 |
Projected health outcomes for women and infants, average per year between 2010 and 2025, for the baseline model (constant unmet need) and two scenarios (all needs met by 2020 and all needs met by 2050) in Vanuatu and Solomon Islands
| Total pregnancies | 10,102 | 7,137 | 5,751 | 20,286 | 18,281 | 17,340 | ||||
| Unintended pregnancies | 4,517 | 2,417 | 1,397 | 4,147 | 2,742 | 2,072 | ||||
| Induced abortions | 1,491 | 798 | 461 | 1,368 | 905 | 684 | ||||
| Total births | 7,298 | 5,411 | 4,542 | 16,280 | 15,000 | 14,402 | ||||
| Unintended births and miscarriages | 3,026 | 1,620 | 936 | 2,778 | 1,840 | 1,390 | ||||
| Birth with any avoidable risk‡ | 4,049 | 2,530 | 1,940 | 8,922 | 7,720 | 7,185 | ||||
| Maternal deaths | 7 | 5 | 4 | 26 | 24 | 23 | ||||
| Infant deaths | 192 | 117 | 89 | 375 | 324 | 302 | ||||
‡ Births to women aged <18 or >35 years; births spaced < 18 months apart; birth order 4 or more.
Figure 1Cumulative family planning costs (modern methods) between 2010–2025 for the baseline model (constant unmet need) and two scenarios (all needs met by 2020 and all needs met by 2050) in Vanuatu and Solomon Islands (US$ millions).
Figure 2Projected family planning costs and health and education savings (US$ millions) of meeting all family planning needs by 2050 and 2020 compared with no change in unmet need for the period 2010–2025.
Sensitivity analysis: Vanuatu
| Base case | 33,602 | $135 | 950 | $4,790 | $4,550,755 | $51,054,348 | 49,922 | $104 | 1,321 | $3,928 | $5,188,506 | $81,696,290 |
| Unmet need for contraception (28 – 33%) | 31,353 – 37,004 | $127 – $142 | 891 – 1,037 | $4,527 –$5,000 | $4,455,206 – $4,694,071 | $47,331,683 – $56,739,129 | 46,602 – 54,912 | $98 - $108 | 1,244 – 1,433 | $3,766 – $4,059 | $5,049,667 – $5,396,741 | $75,778,322 – $90,721,234 |
| Constant rate of reduction of unmet need | 11,009 | $327 | 338 | $10,663 | $3,604,082 | $12,840,011 | 39,097 | $122 | 1051 | $$4,428 | $4,759,294 | $49,176,915 |
| Constant contraceptive method mix | 33,252 | $138 | 949 | $4,824 | $4,578,332 | $50,916,264 | 49,400 | $106 | 1,321 | $3,955 | $5,223,927 | $81,481,832 |
| Constant age-specific fertility rate | 33,573 | $136 | 949 | $4,795 | $4,550,770 | $51,070,751 | 49,883 | $104 | 1,320 | $3,931 | $5,188,521 | $81,730,979 |
| Direct family planning costs +/−25% | 33,602 | $102 – $169 | 950 | $3,593 – $5,988 | $3,413,066 – $5,688,444 | $50,695,941 –$51,412,755 | 49,922 | $78 -– $130 | 1,321 | $2,946 – $4,910 | $3,891,379 – $6,485,632 | $81,178,445 – $82,214,135 |
| Recurrent public sector expenditure +/−25% | 33,602 | $135 | 950 | $4,790 | $4,550,755 | $37,932,354 –$64,176,342 | 49,922 | $104 | 1,321 | $3,928 | $5,188,506 | $60,754,373 –$102,638,206 |
| Discounting (0 – 5%) | 28,366 – 44,103 | $131 – $138 | 804 – 1241 | $4,644 – $4,901 | $3,940,312 – $5,762,703 | $40,726,168 – $72,681,695 | 42,527 – 64,658 | $101 – $106 | 1,128 – 1,705 | $3,843 –$3,989 | $4,500,054 – $6,552,595 | $65,372,266 – $115,790,286 |
Sensitivity analysis: Solomon Islands
| Base case | 22,479 | $139 | 841 | $3,708 | $3,118,381 | $18,661,773 | 33,201 | $101 | 1,216 | $2,762 | $3,358,160 | $30,129,839 |
| Unmet need for contraception (11 – 12%) | 20,446 – 24,506 | $129 – $150 | 767 – 915 | $3,464 – $3,999 | $3,066,994 – $3,169,767 | $16,921,477 – $20,411,314 | 30,191 – 36,203 | $95 – $109 | 1,109 – 1,321 | $2,598 – $2,962 | $3,284,998 – $3,431,316 | $27,425,861 – $32,947,475 |
| Constant rate of reduction of unmet need | 7,393 | $373 | 285 | $9,681 | $2,759,065 | $4,602,740 | 26,106 | $123 | 960 | $3,355 | $3,221,007 | $17,825,146 |
| Constant contraceptive method mix | 21,952 | $133 | 840 | $3,489 | $2,930,505 | $18,601,170 | 32,456 | $97 | 1,213 | $2,603 | $3,157,995 | $30,034,687 |
| Constant age-specific fertility rate | 22,521 | $138 | 843 | $3,699 | $3,118,376 | $18,672,780 | 33,257 | $101 | 1,218 | $2,757 | $3,358,155 | $30,144,376 |
| Direct family planning costs +/−25% | 22,479 | $104 – $173 | 841 | $2,781 – $4,635 | $2,338,786 – $3,897,976 | $18,520,429 – $18,803,118 | 33,201 | $78 – $126 | 1,216 | $2,071 – $3,452 | $2,518,620 – $4,197,701 | $29,928,549 – $30,331,128 |
| Recurrent public sector expenditure +/−25% | 22,479 | $139 | 841 | $3,708 | $3,118,381 | $13,854,987 – $23,468,562 | 33,201 | $101 | 1,216 | $2,762 | $3,358,160 | $22,396,091 – $37,863,588 |
| Discounting (0 – 5%) | 18,948 – 29,572 | $134 – $142 | 711 – 1,104 | $3,579 – $3,797 | $2,699,916 – $3,950,801 | $14,915,362 – $26,491,813 | 28,247 – 43,088 | $98 – $103 | 1,036 – 1,573 | $2,696 – $2,812 | $2,913,710 – $4,241,273 | $24,161,801 – $42,568,107 |