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    <pubDate>mar., 21 mai 2013 09:45:24 +0000</pubDate>
    <lastBuildDate>mar., 21 mai 2013 09:45:24 +0000</lastBuildDate>
    <title>UNFPA Publications</title>
    <link>http://www.unfpa.org</link>
    <description>UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, is an international development agency that promotes the right of every woman, man and child to enjoy a life of health and equal opportunity. UNFPA supports countries in using population data for policies and programmes to reduce poverty and to ensure that every pregnancy is wanted, every birth is safe, every young person is free of HIV/AIDS, and every girl and woman is treated with dignity and respect. UNFPA – because everyone counts.</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <managingEditor>serrano@unfpa.org (Alvaro Serrano)</managingEditor>
    <webMaster>gruber@unfpa.org (Kimberly Gruber)</webMaster>
    <image>
      <title>UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund</title>
      <url>http://www.unfpa.org/images/unfpalogoxs.gif</url>
      <width>80</width>
      <height>36</height>
      <description>The world's largest international source of funding for population and reproductive health programmes</description>
    </image>






        <item>
          <title>UN Commission on Life-Saving Commodities for Women and Children</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/12042;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>The UN Secretary-General&apos;s Global Strategy for Women&apos;s and Children&apos;s Health (2010) called on the global community to work together to save 16 million lives by 2015. This challenge was taken up by the UN Commission on Life-Saving Commodities for Women and Children, which identified and endorsed an initial list of 13 overlooked life-saving commodities that, if more widely accessed and properly used, could save the lives of more than 6 million women and children.    The Commission also identified key, interrelated barriers that prevent access to and use of the 13 commodities and recommended 10 time-bound actions to address them. These focus on the need for improved global and local markets for life-saving commodities, innovative financing, quality strengthening, regulatory efficiency, improved national delivery of commodities and better integration of private sector and consumer needs.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Fifth Stocktaking Meeting on the Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/12843;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>...</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Synthesis Report: UNFPA Global Programme to Enhance RHCS</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/12680;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>This review, which synthesizes 14 country case studies, finds that the UNFPA Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security (RHCS) has successfully set up country-level building blocks for improving access to essential supplies.</description>
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        <item>
          <title>Ten Good Practices in Essential Supplies for Family Planning and Maternal Health</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/11457;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>UNFPA is intensifying strategic support to voluntary family planning through its Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security. Countries participating in the Global Programme are now reporting their own success stories backed by measureable results.    This publication shares numerous examples of activities in countries participating in the Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security as of 2011. Examples are included from Burkina Faso, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Lao PDR, Madagascar, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Niger, Senegal, Sierra Leone. Many are Stream 1 countries in the GPRHCS, which means they receive sustained, multi-year support.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security Annual Report 2011 </title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/10416;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>UNFPA established the Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Security in 2007 as a framework for assisting countries in planning for their own needs. As this report documents, progress in the five years since the programme was launched has been very significant. The Global Programme has mobilized $450 million since 2007. While the trend towards greater emphasis on capacity development continues,support to reproductive health commodities through the GPRHCS 2008-2011 includes contraceptives worth 56 million couple-years of protection.    Within UNFPA, the Global Programme worked in collaboration with the Maternal Health Thematic Fund to provide programmatic support to ensure that life-saving maternal health drugs and supplies were available in all facilities. The GPRHCS also worked closely with the HIV/AIDS Branch to increase the availability of contraceptives in countries with high HIV prevalence and among vulnerable populations.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Contraceptive Commodities for Women&apos;s Health</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/10266;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>Expanding access to a choice of affordable and appropriate contraceptive commodities is critical to achieving the goal of reproductive health for all. This report, prepared for the United Nations Commission on Commodities for Women and Children&#8217;s Health, provides a review of three contraceptive commodities that are considered to be overlooked or underutilized: the female condom, hormonal implants and emergency contraception.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Medicines for Maternal Health</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/10265;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>Expanding access to quality, affordable maternal health medicines is critical to making progress in reducing maternal mortality. However, significant challenges often impede such access. Chief among them is a lack of data on the needs, gaps, systems and financing for maternal health medicines.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Family Planning</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/397;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>This handbook, one of the World Health Organization&apos;s Family Planning Cornerstones, provides evidence-based guidance developed through worldwide collaboration. It offers clinic-based health care professionals in developing countries the latest guidance on providing with the full range of contraceptive methods. Many additional resources, including an online version, translations (planned for 10 languages), wall charts, chapter summaries, checklists, and ordering information are available here. If you have earlier versions of the report, please print and note these changes: Summary of Major Changes from 2008 and 2011 Updates</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>UNFPA Global Consultation on Family Planning</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/12844;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>...</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Strengthening Country Office Capacity to Support Sexual and Reproductive Health  in the New Aid Environment </title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/8834;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>This report takes stock of the progress of sexual and reproductive health initiatives of the UNFPA and World Health Organization in four countries in 2011: Lao People&#8217;s Democratic Republic, Malawi, Senegal and Tajikistan. The studies also focus on how the role of the country offices of the two agencies has changed in the context of sexual and reproductive health.    &#160;    &#160;</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Comprehensive Condom Programming</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/8017;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>This guide outlines a 10-Step Strategic Approach to scale up comprehensive condom programming that encourages the participation of donors and international agencies while placing ultimate responsibility for decision-making and implementation in the hands of national partners. The design of a condom programme may vary from country to country, but the process of designing and implementing a SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-governed) strategy has many common features, which are described in this document.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Donor Support for Contraceptives and Condoms for STI/HIV Prevention 2010</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/6479;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>This report, updated annually, is a rich source of data for development that can drive good planning for contraceptive supply, advocacy and resource mobilization. The report contains dozens of tables and graphs full of information and analysis that can influence policy dialogue, advocacy and interagency work. It aims to enhance coordination among donors, improve partnerships between donors and national governments, and mobilize the resources needed to accelerate progress towards universal access to sexual and reproductive health, as set forth in the ICPD Programme of Action and the Millennium Development Goals.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Towards a Unified Approach</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/8018;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>The following document outlines the conceptual framework under which the Inter-Agency Task Team on Comprehensive Condom Programming (IATT/CCP) operates. It concludes with a 10-step approach to scale up comprehensive condom programming in individual countries.</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>Success Stories in Reproductive Health Commodity Security</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/6688;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>Sustained and strategic support from UNFPA through the Global Programme to Enhance Reproductive Health Commodity Securities is helping developing countries to provide access to a reliable supply of contraceptives, condoms, medicines and equipment. This publication presents eight examples of specific activities funded.    &#160;</description>
        </item>
        
        <item>
          <title>UNFPA Annual Report 2010</title>
          <link>http://unfpa.org/public/cache/offonce/home/publications/pid/7797;jsessionid=D011A18242B9F3029CF30ED3366BD9B6.jahia01</link>
          <description>The annual report illustrates UNFPA&apos;s projects and programmes in 155 countries in 2010 and provides a snapshot of income and project expenditures for the year.</description>
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