Bangladesh's Family Planning Programme Faces Shortages
نظرة سريعة
Bangladesh's family planning programme is faltering due to shortages of basic contraceptives, affecting services for underprivileged people.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
Bangladesh has a long history of family planning and has made significant progress in reducing birth rates.
For decades, the South Asian nation was hailed as a success for slashing birth rates through an expansive state-backed family planning programme that sent field workers door to door with pills, condoms and advice on birth spacing. But that system is now faltering, with government clinics across the country of 170 million people running out of basic contraceptives after procurement failures and administrative disruption left supplies depleted in nearly a third of districts. “We haven’t had supplies of condoms for the last four to five months,” said Ahmed bin Sultan, 33, a family planning officer at the Savar Upazila Health Complex in Dhaka. “We are continuously requesting service seekers to buy them from dispensaries.” The centre is barely functioning, like most government-run facilities that have offered nearly free family planning services to underprivileged people for decades.
أسئلة مفتوحة
- What are the root causes of the procurement failures and administrative disruption?
- How will the government address the shortages of basic contraceptives?





