| Literature DB >> 34816226 |
Krishna Bose1, Kim Martin1, Kathryn Walsh2, Maheen Malik1, Paul Nyachae3, Morine Lucy Sierra3, Albert Bwire3, Denis Sama3, Tumaini Kiyola3, Vanessa Mitchell1, Hawa Talla4, Josephat Avoce4, Kate Graham1, Mukesh Sharma5, Devika Varghese5, Andrea Ferrand5, Victor Imuwahen Igharo6, Dorcas Nelson Akila6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: More than half of all adolescents globally live in Asia, with India having the largest adolescent population in the world at 253 million. In sub-Saharan Africa, adolescents make up the greatest proportion of the population, with 23% of the population aged 10-19. And these numbers are predicted to grow rapidly-particularly in urban areas as rural youth migrate to cities for economic opportunities. While adolescents and youth are subject to high sexual and reproductive health risks, few efforts have been documented for addressing these in urban settings, especially in poor settlements.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; contraception; family planning; scale; sexual and reproductive health; urban slums; youth
Year: 2021 PMID: 34816226 PMCID: PMC8597915 DOI: 10.3389/fgwh.2021.673168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Glob Womens Health ISSN: 2673-5059
Figure 1TCI is working with local governments in 39 cities/states across seven countries to implement AYSRH programming.
TCI geographic and population coverage.
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Benin | Cotonou, UCOZ | 1,804,696 | 204,369 |
| India | Agra, Aligarh, Allahabad, Bareilly, Faizabad, Firozabad, Ghaziabad, Gorakhpur, Kanpur, Lucknow, Mathura, Meerut, Saharanpur, Shahjahanpur, and Varanasi | 19,232,784 | 1,639,542 |
| Kenya | Malindi, Migori, Mombasa, Kamukunji, Kasarani, Ruraka, Nyamira, and Vihiga | 6,431,492 | 806,228 |
| Nigeria | Edo, Niger, Ogun, and Plateau | 10,007,753 | 948,317 |
| Senegal | Ziguinchor | 662,473 | 64,677 |
| Tanzania | Arusha DC, Arusha City, Ilala, Kinondoni, Tanga City, and Geita | 4,455,337 | 496,730 |
| Uganda | Buikwe, Iganga, and Mukono | 1,947,667 | 204,969 |
| TOTAL | 39 cities/states | 44,542,202 | 4,364,832 |
Estimates made using census and UN Population Division data.
Figure 2TCI's concentric circle strategy for AYSRH programming.
Figure 3Four levels of performance are possible when conducting a RAISE assessment.
RAISE assessments for six TCI cities and actions taken leading to improvements.
|
|
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
| Round 1: 80% | • Financial commitment for AYSRH | • Continuous political engagement | |
| Round 1: 81% | • Advocacy | • Use of FP champions for advocacy | |
| Round 1: 48% | • Financial documentation and management | • Non-technical coaching on financial management and documentation | |
| Round 1: 43% | • Strengthened collaboration between municipality and health system | • Supportive supervision for AYSRH | |
| Round 1: 66% | • Improved leadership for AY interventions | • Management coaching facility staff for timely upload of AY data on HMIS portal | |
| Round 1: 53% | • State adoption and scale up of best practices | • Sensitizing policymakers on need for dedicated AYSRH programming and funding | |