TABLE B.6 NUMBER OF COUPLE YEARS OF PROTECTION PROVIDED, BY REGION, BY METHOD, 2015–2016 TYPE OF METHOD Year AR AWR EN ESEAOR SAR WHR Total Intrauterine devices 2016 1,424,628 497,477 19,347 199,679 1,348,074 2,651,157 6,140,360 2015 565,290 233,162 29,383 222,020 1,024,635 2,541,309 4,615,798 Implants 2016 2,437,908 130,877 7,015 79,297 79,124 1,145,216 3,879,437 2015 1,386,194 46,536 6,938 39,288 94,304 1,102,811 2,676,070 Oral contraceptive pills 2016 1,480,745 251,840 3,097 66,528 222,066 567,218 2,591,494 2015 928,312 51,731 3,316 94,944 407,336 616,740 2,102,378 Condoms SOCIAL2016 1,272,659 ENTERPRISE43,482 IN18,867 IPPF270,315 195,263 293,596 2,094,180 2015 783,165 17,135 11,609 414,100 288,545 315,079 1,829,633 Injectables MAPPING2016 SOCIAL1,065,356 ENTERPRISE31,080 ACTIVITIES89 49,564 155,627 653,097 1,954,813 AMONG2015 MEMBER1,169,831 ASSOCIATIONS24,955 41 52,770 241,689 731,227 2,220,514 Voluntary surgical contraception 2016 76,880 - 480 12,760 537,612 1,245,480 1,873,212 (vasectomy and tubal ligation) 2015 204,720 - 290 19,110 563,230 1,242,130 2,029,480 Emergency contraception 2016 9,143 557 671 1,126 104,477 81,228 197,201 2015 6,775 115 418 1,308 99,585 75,108 41 183,310 Other hormonal methods 2016 58 - 66 90 - 40,445 40,659 2015 3 - 70 32 - 49,652 49,756 15 Other barrier methods 2016 3,166 445 49 126 - 1,200 4,986 2015 651 86 65 21733 - 2,400 9 3,420 25 IPPF TOTAL 2016 7,770,541 955,758 49,680 679,485 2,642,243 6,678,636 18,776,343 ANNUAL PERFORMANCE REPORT MAY 2018 2015 5,044,940 373,720 52,128 843,789 2,719,323 416,676,457 15,710,357 Number of responses 2016 (n=40) (n=11) (n=19) (n=25) (n=8) (n=27) (n=130) 2015 (n=39) (n=10) (n=15) (n=25) (n=8) (n=27) (n=124) 2016 23 Photos: IPPF/Tom Pilston/Nepal (p2) IPPF/Marc Femenia/Sweden (p3) IPPF/Erika Morrilo/Belize (p4) IPPF/Pedro Meyer/Brazil (p7) IPPF/Jane Mingay/Georgia (p9) IPPF/Erika Morrilo/Belize (p12) IPPF/Dana Rogers/Colombia (p15) IPPF/Crispin Rodwell/Bolivia (p16) SOCIAL ENTERPRISE IN IPPF • • • • 1 CONTENTS KEY ABBREVIATIONS 2 LIST OF TABLES DEFINITION OF TERMS 3 Table 1: Social enterprise activities 9 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5 Table 2: Survey response rate 10 Table 3: Social enterprise in IPPF, by region 10 1 INTRODUCTION 7 Table 4: Formal business qualification of managers and business/marketing strategy in place, by social enterprise activity 12 2 METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH 8 Table 5: Social enterprise contribution to Member Association total income 13 2.1 Sample size 8 Table 6: Financial status of social enterprise activities 14 2.2 Data collection 8 Table 7: Financial status of each social enterprise activity 15 2.3 Data processing 9 Table 8: Member Associations conducting workplace health service delivery 17 2.4 Data analysis 9 3 FINDINGS 10 LIST OF FIGURES 3.1 Response rate 10 Figure 1: Member Associations conducting social enterprise activities 11 3.2 Social enterprise activities 10 Figure 2: Number of social enterprise activities per Member Association 11 3.3 Size and scale of the social enterprise sector within IPPF 11 Figure 3: Start-up cost and last financial year income reported per 3.3.1 Duration of social enterprise activities 12 social enterprise activity 13 3.3.2 Social enterprise start-up costs and generated income 12 Figure 4: Frequency of reported barriers faced by Member Associations 16 3.3.3 Financial contribution of social enterprise to Member Association total income 13 Figure 5: Provision and receipt of technical assistance 17 3.4 Social enterprise governance 15 Figure 6: Other activities implemented as part of workplace health service delivery 18 3.5 Barriers faced by Member Associations engaging in income generating activities 16 3.6 Provision and receipt of technical assistance 17 Figure 7: Service provision enabled through workplace health service delivery 18 3.7 Workplace health service delivery 17 Annex 1: SEAP survey 19 Annex 2: Participating Member Associations 30 Annex 3: Social enterprise activities by Member Association 31 Annex 4: Domestic legal body regulating social enterprise 72 Annex 5: Technical assistance provided 73 Annex 6: Technical assistance received 75 Annex 7: Member Associations ready to provide technical assistance 77 Annex 8: Workplace health service delivery by Member Association 80 2 • • • • SOCIAL ENTERPRISE IN IPPF KEY ABBREVIATIONS APB Annual Programme Budget OB/GYN Obstetrics and gynaecology AR Africa Region PHN Public health nurses ARO Africa Regional Office QoC Quality of care AWR Arab World Region QoS Quality of service AWRO Arab World Regional Office RH Reproductive health CME/CEU Continuing Medical Education/Continuing RO Regional Office Education Unit RTI Reproductive tract infection CSE Comprehensive sexuality education SAR South Asia Region EC Emergency contraception SARO South Asia Regional Office EN European Network SEAP Social Enterprise Acceleration Programme ESEAOR East and South East Asia and Oceania Region SRH Sexual and reproductive health ESC Economic, social and cultural rights SRHR Sexual and reproductive health and rights FP Family planning SROP Sub-regional Office in the Pacific GBV Gender-based violence STI Sexually transmitted infection IPPF International Planned Parenthood Federation WHR Western Hemisphere Region MCH Maternal and child health SOCIAL ENTERPRISE IN IPPF • • • • 3 DEFINITION OF TERMS For the purpose of this mapping exercise, the terms used in Static clinic within the workplace run by Member Association the survey included definitions as listed below. refers to a static clinic operating from fixed premises within the company where the clients work, and the clinic is Social enterprise is used to describe an organization managed by the Member Association and run by full- and/or or a business unit within an organization that uses part-time Member Association staff. entrepreneurial methods (for example, the sale of specialised services or products) to produce a profit used to finance Static clinic within the workplace run by an associated health activities that enable the organization to fulfil its social facility belongs to private individuals, organizations or the mission. public sector, and provides SRH services by trained doctors, clinicians and counsellors. An associated health facility is Urban refers to a densely populated area such as a city NOT managed by the Member Association and services are or town. provided by the facility’s staff, NOT by Member Association Peri‑urban refers to an area peripheral to a city or a town, staff. Member Associations have an agreement to provide either inside a city or town’s outer rim or immediately significant technical support, monitoring, quality of care and outside its official boundaries. oversight. Member Associations may provide contraceptives Rural refers to an area away from the influence of large cities and other sexual and reproductive health commodities to the such as villages, farms or other isolated houses with a much associated health facility. lower population density than that of urban and peri-urban Pop‑up clinic within the workplace is set up by a Member areas. Association as a clinic for the day to deliver services in a Separate business unit refers to an activity operating conference room or similar. independently of the Member Association with its own Mobile/outreach clinic run by Member Association refers accounting and operational functions. to a non-clinic-based offsite location providing sexual and Board of governors is a several-member group that oversees reproductive health services by trained service providers and the running of the income generating activity. counsellors. A mobile clinic or outreach team is managed and run by the Member Association staff. Services are Business plan sets out the future strategy and financial provided through health posts, equipped vehicles and other development of a business, usually covering a period of premises. several years. Static clinic nearby refers to a clinic set up by the Member Technical assistance refers to knowledge and skills that an Association in a location to capture the high number of organization acquires from an outside source to improve its workers in that area. programmes and/or systems or solve specific problems. Workplace health service delivery refers to services delivered to workers at their place of work or through a service point set up to capture the workforce. 4 • • • • SOCIAL ENTERPRISE IN IPPF SOCIAL ENTERPRISE IN IPPF • • • • 5 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY IPPF Member Associations have had a longstanding (3) identify areas where further development is needed. Member Associations provided responses to the survey, a and often successful track record of engaging in social rate of 80%. Of these, 126 were fully completed, making Additionally, this exercise provided an opportunity to enterprise, spanning decades and enabling financial the survey completion rate 94%. The response rates varied document the provision and receipt of technical assistance sustainability for many. The strategic role of social enterprise from 100% for Africa Region (AR) and Arab World Region by Member Associations and map workplace health services in facilitating the diversification of sources of funding (AWR) to 64% for the European Network (EN). delivered by Member Associations. was recognized by International Planned Parenthood The survey showed that 69% of the respondents, Federation’s (IPPF) Governing Council which, in IPPF’s The research for this mapping exercise included a desk 92 Member Associations, conduct social enterprise Strategic Framework 2016–2022, committed the Federation review, consultation with SEAP regional focal points and activities.
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