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      Lessons from the recent rise in use of female sterilization in Malawi.

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      Studies in family planning

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          Abstract

          Although female sterilization is the most widely used modern contraceptive method in the world, most family planning programs in Africa have had difficulty providing it. Malawi, however, despite daunting constraints, has made female sterilization widely and equitably accessible, thereby increasing method choice and helping its citizens better meet their reproductive intentions. Ten percent of currently married Malawian women of reproductive age rely on female sterilization for contraceptive protection, compared with less than 2 percent across Africa, and demand to limit births now exceeds demand to space births. Malawi's female sterilization prevalence surpasses that of some high-resource countries. Key service-delivery factors enabling this achievement include supportive policies, strong public-private partnerships, and mobile services delivered at no cost by dedicated providers. Challenges remain, but Malawi's achievement offers lessons for other countries with low availability of female sterilization and similar resource constraints.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Stud Fam Plann
          Studies in family planning
          0039-3665
          0039-3665
          Mar 2013
          : 44
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] RESPOND Project, EngenderHealth, New York, NY, USA. rjacobstein@engenderhealth.org
          Article
          10.1111/j.1728-4465.2013.00345.x
          23512875
          0b070666-d222-4b49-a5cc-ec10b8fd20e3
          © 2013 The Population Council, Inc.
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