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The Health Policy Project ended in 2016. Work continued under Health Policy Plus (HP+) until 2022.

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ICFP 2016: Bali…Finally!

January 26, 2016

By Jay Gribble, Deputy Director, FP/RH and Senior Fellow

This blog was originally posted on the official 2016 ICFP Conference Hub: http://crowd360.org/balifinally/

I’m excited to be here in Bali—after volcanoes and blizzards, it’s pretty amazing that we have come together once again to refocus efforts on family planning. I’ve been here only a few hours and I can already feel the good vibes. On my way to registration, several events caught my eye, and I think they capture the diversity that characterizes #ICFP.

hp+ team in bali at icfp
The Health Policy Plus team at the 2016 International Conference on Family Planning in Nusa Dua, Indonesia

One sign I noticed announced a training session for learning how to insert implants. If non-clinical people (like me!) can be taught to provide implants in a day, then I’m confident that we can expand access to this important long-acting method through lower cadres of providers and help many more women achieve their reproductive goals. I didn’t get to sign up for the training, but I know what I can do to support improving access to implants: each of us needs to need to advocate hard for evidence-base policy changes related to who can provide this method; we need to push ministries of health to implement task sharing/task shifting policies that are already on the book; and we need to engage civil society and decision maker alike to hold governments accountable for following through on the commitments they have made to FP2020 and the Ouagadougou Partnership.

I saw another sign for the principal investigators of PMA2020 project—an effort to collect facility-based and individual-level data on a regular basis to help countries track movement on their FP2020 commitments. Coupling the use of new technologies for data collection with field work on a more regular basis—twice per year, countries involved in this project have the opportunity to keep their fingers on the pulse of what’s going on with FP in their countries. And with high-quality data provided on a regular basis, there’s the opportunity not only to monitor better, but also to hold governments accountable for what they have committed to do. We talk about evidence-based best practices, and with regular data, there’s the opportunity to be proactive and make changes where needed in program efforts, so that countries achieve goals they have set for themselves.

A third sign I saw was an all-day training on reproductive health for journalists. We can’t underestimate the importance of an informed media for raising awareness among the public and decisionmakers when things are not working right. Whether the news is related to funding, stock outs, policies that are not implemented—or virtually any other FP/RH issue that needs to be addressed, having the media understand them and cover them helps get attention and action around our issues. As we move into ICFP and the range of issues that will be addressed in the upcoming week, it’s exciting to know that journalists from around the world will be coving new findings, issues related to their countries, and seeing the opportunities from what they hear and see to raise in the news when they get back home. An informed media can hold decisionmakers accountable for following through on FP commitments, which can directly impact the quality of women’s lives.

ICFP appears to have something for everyone. One of the areas I’m most excited about is the advocacy and accountability tract—panels, posters, and even a space for salon sessions of interesting discussion on what’s new and how to do things better. Each of us has something to learn—and to offer, too. Each of us is an FP/RH activist in one way or another. We are here because we care and want to make a difference at wherever we can. Accountability can begin at the community, and can go up to the national parliament—making sure that public officials follow through on what they said they will do. Advocacy is equally broad—from making the case at the community when something needs to be improved, to working with parliamentary committees and ministries of finance to allocate needed funds to support programs. Look for the advocacy and accountability hashtag #ACT4FP and check out some of the sessions, salons, trainings, or posters; they are designed to help each of become more effective in our commitments to FP/RH.

We’re here in Bali—finally! Let’s make the most of the opportunity to learn and share, expand our networks, and head back home with a few new tricks up our sleeves!

 
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The Health Policy Project is a five-year cooperative agreement funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development under Agreement No. AID-OAA-A-10-00067, beginning September 30, 2010. The project's HIV-related activities are supported by the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). It is implemented by Futures Group, in collaboration with Plan International USA, Avenir Health (previously Futures Institute), Partners in Population and Development, Africa Regional Office (PPD ARO), Population Reference Bureau (PRB), RTI International, and White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood (WRA). The information provided on this Web site is not official U.S. Government information and does not represent the views or positions of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the U.S. Government.

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