Contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) is a vital indicator
used by country governments, international donors, and other stakeholders for
measuring progress in family planning programs against country targets and
global initiatives as well as for estimating health outcomes. Because of the
need for more frequent CPR estimates than population-based surveys currently
provide, alternative approaches for estimating CPRs are being explored,
including using contraceptive logistics data.
Using data from the
Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) in 30 countries, population data from the
United States Census Bureau International Database, and logistics data from the
Procurement Planning and Monitoring Report (PPMR) and the Pipeline Monitoring
and Procurement Planning System (PipeLine), we developed and evaluated 3 models
to generate country-level, public-sector contraceptive prevalence estimates for
injectable contraceptives, oral contraceptives, and male condoms. Models
included: direct estimation through existing couple-years of protection (CYP)
conversion factors, bivariate linear regression, and multivariate linear
regression. Model evaluation consisted of comparing the referent DHS prevalence
rates for each short-acting method with the model-generated prevalence rate
using multiple metrics, including mean absolute error and proportion of
countries where the modeled prevalence rate for each method was within 1, 2, or
5 percentage points of the DHS referent value.
For the methods studied,
family planning use estimates from public-sector logistics data were correlated
with those from the DHS, validating the quality and accuracy of current
public-sector logistics data. Logistics data for oral and injectable
contraceptives were significantly associated (P<.05) with the referent DHS values for both
bivariate and multivariate models. For condoms, however, that association was
only significant for the bivariate model. With the exception of the CYP-based
model for condoms, models were able to estimate public-sector prevalence rates
for each short-acting method to within 2 percentage points in at least 85% of
countries.
Public-sector
contraceptive logistics data are strongly correlated with public-sector
prevalence rates for short-acting methods, demonstrating the quality of current
logistics data and their ability to provide relatively accurate prevalence
estimates. The models provide a starting point for generating interim estimates
of contraceptive use when timely survey data are unavailable. All models except
the condoms CYP model performed well; the regression models were most accurate
but the CYP model offers the simplest calculation method. Future work extending
the research to other modern methods, relating subnational logistics data with
prevalence rates, and tracking that relationship over time is needed.
Below: Public‐Sector Male Condom Prevalence Rate Estimates
Below: CPR Estimates for Public‐Sector Short‐Acting Methods
Below: Public‐Sector Injectables Prevalence Rate Estimates
Read more at: http://ht.ly/SAUXp
By: Cunningham M1, Bock A2, Brown N3, Sacher S1, Hatch B4, Inglis A1, Aronovich D1.
- 1John Snow, Inc., Arlington, VA, USA.
- 2John Snow, Inc., Arlington, VA, USA
- 3University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
- 4JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc., Arlington, VA, USA.
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