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Strategy to enhance male participation in family planning on the anvil

Sentinel Digital DeskBy : Sentinel Digital Desk

  |  2 Jun 2016 12:00 AM GMT

Kolkata, June 1: A strategy to bolster participation of would-be fathers in making informed decisions is in the pipeline to enhance their integration in the family planning process, especially during their spouse’s pregncy, and reduce the burden of contraception on women, an expert has said. It takes two to tango but when it comes to taking their pick from a basket of contraceptives, men tend to shy away from their role in what should be a commitment as a couple, the expert said. So, under the ambit of the new strategy comes debunking myths on vasectomy, information on contraceptive and sterilisation choices and taking joint decisions as a couple on spacing of pregncies as well as avoiding unwanted ones. “In any hospital you go to, in the ante-tal clinics you will see that men usually don’t participate and are usually seated outside and not let in. We are framing guidelines so that both men and women receive counselling in these clinics,” Alok Banerjee, Member Advisor of the Technical Resource Group, Union Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, told IANS on the sidelines of a media workshop here. The workshop was organised by the Population Foundation of India (PFI) on family planning and reproductive health issues with a global and Indian perspective.

“Since the clinics have a counsellor, they should talk to the couple so the men also understand the need for spacing, for contraceptives. This will make joint decisions easy,” Banerjee elaborated. Antetal care is the care one receives from healthcare professiols during pregncy. India has promised to meet the FP2020 goal of providing 48 million additiol women and girls in the country with access to modern contraceptives by 2020. “In the vision document FP2020, male involvement is one of the components but a proper plan is not chalked out,” said Banerjee, adding the strategy would probably be taken up following a mid-term review of the FP2020’s progress later this year.

Other key features of the plan revolve around sharing data on contraception. According to PFI, the public health system offers five methods: female sterilisation, male sterilisation, IUCD, oral pills and condoms. A recent addition is injectables (DMPA) for women. In India, female sterilisation accounts for 74.4 percent of the contraceptive method mix while only 2.3 percent of the mix is associated with male sterilisation, says the ‘FP2020 Partner in Progress 2013-2014’ report. (IANS)

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