Document Type
Brief
Publication Date
2015
Abstract
Family planning (FP) is recognized as a necessary tool for faster fertility decline leading to accelerated economic development. However, its unique and potent role in preserving mother and child health is less well understood. This brief explains why FP must be prioritized in Balochistan, Pakistan’s health strategy as a key intervention for reducing maternal, infant, and under-five mortality in the province. By fulfilling the existing unmet need for birth spacing and limiting, it is possible to prevent 41 percent of maternal deaths, 35 percent of infant deaths, and 74 percent of young child deaths. FP’s wider health benefits include reduced anemia among women; lower numbers of underweight, wasted, and stunted children; and reduced burden on antenatal, obstetric, postnatal, and post-abortion services. Family planning is also highly cost-effective: every dollar spent on this intervention saves nearly four dollars that would otherwise be spent on maternal health, immunization, malaria, water and sanitation, and education. FP’s benefits in terms of increased women’s empowerment, female participation in the workforce, household savings, poverty reduction, and school enrollment are also well-documented.
Recommended Citation
Sathar, Zeba, Maqsood Sadiq, and Seemin Ashfaq. 2015. "Reducing maternal and child mortality in Balochistan: The untapped potential of family planning," Policy brief. Islamabad: Population Council, The Evidence Project.
DOI
10.31899/rh9.1043
Language
English
Project
The Evidence Project
Included in
Demography, Population, and Ecology Commons, Family, Life Course, and Society Commons, International Public Health Commons, Maternal and Child Health Commons, Women's Health Commons