The Voice of America
Ethiopian women produce an average of five children in their lifetimes because less than 30 percent of women in Ethiopia - the second-largest population in Africa - have access to birth control devices.
A project offering increased health services in portions of the largely rural countryside of this country proposes to lower the birth rate by increasing access to birth control with an electronic voucher scheme targeting young Ethiopian women between the ages of 15 and 29 years of age.
The scheme is based on teams of health volunteers who offer rural women the chance to learn the benefits of birth control and have an opportunity to order intra-uterine devices (IUDs) and other birth control measures. The voucher system, which is run by the non-profit Marie Stopes International and funded by the government of the Netherlands, is meant to increase use of health services while addressing the unmet need for contraceptives.
“It is a pro-poor approach,” said Abebe Shibru, deputy country director of Marie Stopes International, Ethiopia. “So women who want to get the service can get it free of charge. So it would enable us to reach the underserved community in Ethiopia.”
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Ethiopian women produce an average of five children in their lifetimes because less than 30 percent of women in Ethiopia - the second-largest population in Africa - have access to birth control devices.
A project offering increased health services in portions of the largely rural countryside of this country proposes to lower the birth rate by increasing access to birth control with an electronic voucher scheme targeting young Ethiopian women between the ages of 15 and 29 years of age.
The scheme is based on teams of health volunteers who offer rural women the chance to learn the benefits of birth control and have an opportunity to order intra-uterine devices (IUDs) and other birth control measures. The voucher system, which is run by the non-profit Marie Stopes International and funded by the government of the Netherlands, is meant to increase use of health services while addressing the unmet need for contraceptives.
“It is a pro-poor approach,” said Abebe Shibru, deputy country director of Marie Stopes International, Ethiopia. “So women who want to get the service can get it free of charge. So it would enable us to reach the underserved community in Ethiopia.”
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