Essential Supplies Overview

Access to a reliable supply of contraceptives, condoms, medicines and equipment saves and improves lives.  A choice of contraceptives empowers couples to plan their families.  Condoms can keep HIV from spreading. An inexpensive medication can keep a woman from bleeding to death in childbirth.

UNFPA’s goal is reproductive health commodity security, which means that every individual can obtain and use affordable, quality reproductive health supplies of their choice whenever they need them. This is essential to delivering a world in which every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth safe, and every young person's potential fulfilled, which are the goals of UNFPA.  

UNFPA's Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security is a catalyst for national efforts to build stronger health systems and procure essential supplies.  It is helping achieve the following results:

Global Programme at a glance
  • $450 million mobilized since 2007
  • Contraceptives worth 56 million couple-years of protection provided 2008-2011
  • $76.3 million expenditure in 2011, with 57.5% to commodities and 42.5% to capacity development
  • 46 countries supported by the GPRHCS in 2011
  • Stock-outs or sudden shortages are averted
  • National policies and budget lines for reproductive health commodities are in place
  • Supply management is computerized and run by trained staff
  • Many more couples are using modern methods of contraception

In September 2011, first ladies, ministers of health and parliamentarians from 12 countries attended the first UN High Level Meeting on Reproductive Health Commodity Security. The distinguished group agreed that voluntary family planning, secured by a steady supply of contraceptives, is a national priority for saving women’s lives.

 

Latest News

04 June 2013

Providing Safe Delivery for Displaced Women in Syria

DAMASCUS--- Sitting in her bed at the intensive care unit of the Obstetric University Hospital, Dania Kadra considers herself lucky to be alive and to have safely delivered her baby boy.  In December 2012, a missile slammed into the house of the pregnant 40-year old mother of three killing her husband and forcing her and her three children, parents and siblings to move from their rural home to a rented apartment in a suburb of Damascus. more
31 May 2013

Ministers at Women Deliver Pledge to Ensure Universal Access to Family Planning

KUALA LUMPUR Women Deliver 2013 ended in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday with a pledge by participating government Ministers to ensure that sexual and reproductive health is central to the post-2015 development agenda.  Adopting a Call to Action at the end of a forum on “Meeting Our Commitments for Family Planning,” the Ministers said they would hold themselves accountable for achieving universal access to family planning, and would work to eliminate barriers to service delivery and commodities, especially for youth and vulnerable populations. more
29 May 2013

Born into Crisis: Unwanted Pregnancies in Syria

ZA’ATARI CAMP - When aid workers with the UNFPA speak to women inside Syria - many of them displaced from their homes and living in cramped collective shelters - they say they would rather do anything than get pregnant.  “No one wants to be pregnant in the shelters… That’s universal wherever we go,” said Laila Baker, UNFPA representative in Syria.  “There is no place to take care of the baby and it’s another mouth to feed.” more