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Field Action Report
Open Access

Informed push distribution of contraceptives in Senegal reduces stockouts and improves quality of family planning services

Bocar Mamadou Daff, Cheikh Seck, Hassan Belkhayat and Perri Sutton
Global Health: Science and Practice May 2014, 2(2):245-252; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00171
Bocar Mamadou Daff
aMinistry of Health and Social Action [Senegal], Dakar, Senegal
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Cheikh Seck
bIntraHealth International, Senegal Urban Reproductive Health Initiative, Dakar, Senegal
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Hassan Belkhayat
cMcKinsey & Company, Casablanca, Morocco
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Perri Sutton
dBill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, WA, USA
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  • For correspondence: perri.sutton@gatesfoundation.org
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  • FIGURE 1.
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    FIGURE 1.

    Informed Push Model Streamlines Deliveries and Eliminates Orders Between Service Delivery Points (SDPs) and the Regional Warehouse

  • Figure2
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    A private logistician delivers contraceptives and collects data at a health post in Pikine, Senegal.

  • FIGURE 2.
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    FIGURE 2.

    Percentage of Facilities Experiencing a Stockout in 2 Comparison Districts, Dakar, Senegal, January–July 2012

    Abbreviation: IUDs, intrauterine devices.

  • FIGURE 3.
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    FIGURE 3.

    Average Monthly Consumption of Contraceptives in Pikine District, Dakar, Senegal, Before and 1 Year After IPM Implementation

    Abbreviations: IPM, informed push model; MCPR, modern contraceptive prevalence rate.

  • FIGURE 4.
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    FIGURE 4.

    Method Mixa Before and 1 Year After IPM Implementation, Pikine District, Dakar, Senegal

    Abbreviations: IPM, informed push model; IUDs, intrauterine devices.

    a Excluding condoms.

  • FIGURE 5.
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    FIGURE 5.

    National IPM Scale-Up Plan, Senegal

    Abbreviation: IPM, informed push model.

Additional Files

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  • GHSP-D-13-00171 Supplementary Material

    The full-text of this article has been translated into French. Click on the links below to access either the Microsoft Word or PDF version of the translated article.

    Files in this Data Supplement:

    • Supplementary Material - French version of the full-text article in PDF format.
    • Supplementary Material - French version of the full-text article in Microsoft Word format.
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Global Health: Science and Practice: 2 (2)
Global Health: Science and Practice
Vol. 2, No. 2
May 01, 2014
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Informed push distribution of contraceptives in Senegal reduces stockouts and improves quality of family planning services
Bocar Mamadou Daff, Cheikh Seck, Hassan Belkhayat, Perri Sutton
Global Health: Science and Practice May 2014, 2 (2) 245-252; DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00171

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Informed push distribution of contraceptives in Senegal reduces stockouts and improves quality of family planning services
Bocar Mamadou Daff, Cheikh Seck, Hassan Belkhayat, Perri Sutton
Global Health: Science and Practice May 2014, 2 (2) 245-252; DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00171
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  • Data to Action: A Mixed-Methods Study of Data Use Teams, Improved Availability of Contraceptives in Guinea, Indonesia, Kenya, and Myanmar
  • A Rapid Cost Modeling Tool for Evaluating and Improving Public Health Supply Chain Designs
  • Do changes to supply chains and procurement processes yield cost savings and improve availability of pharmaceuticals, vaccines or health products? A systematic review of evidence from low-income and middle-income countries
  • Strengthening Government Leadership in Family Planning Programming in Senegal: From Proof of Concept to Proof of Implementation in 2 Districts
  • Moving Medicine, Moving Minds: Helping Developing Countries Overcome Barriers to Outsourcing Health Commodity Distribution to Boost Supply Chain Performance and Strengthen Health Systems
  • Mentoring, Task Sharing, and Community Outreach Through the TutoratPlus Approach: Increasing Use of Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptives in Senegal
  • Leading With LARCs in Nigeria: The Stars Are Aligned to Expand Effective Family Planning Services Decisively
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