Selecting a Delivery System
The major distinctions among delivery systems are between
clinic-based delivery, community-based distribution (or outreach systems more
generally), and commercial distribution. An overlapping distinction may also be
made between public and private distribution, although private systems may
involve some degree of public subsidy. These different systems are often
complementary:
· Clinics are needed
for such methods as sterilization and to provide backup for outreach workers and
referral, when needed, for clients' medical problems. Proximity to clinics
increases contraceptive use, as noted earlier, up to the point at which clinics
and other facilities are easily accessible to everyone.
· Community-based distribution
involves bringing contraceptives to women in their own communities, rather than
requiring them to travel to clinics. Such efforts are especially needed where
clinics are too sparse and too expensive to build and maintain. They often
depend on local residents with a few weeks' training, who receive no fixed
salary but may have various incentives. Their effectiveness at increasing
contraceptive use has been demonstrated in many countries, including Egypt,
Mexico, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Bangladesh (Gallen and Rinehart,
1986; Bertrand, 1991). However, at higher levels of contraceptive prevalence in
Brazil and the Eastern Caribbean, community-based distribution had minimal
effect. With the large workforce they require, the costs of community-based
distribution can be a concern. These costs can vary from US$5 to US$150 per user
per year (Huber and Harvey, 1989). For each setting in which outreach is needed,
the most cost-effective way to provide outreach needs to be considered.
· Distributing partly subsidized
contraceptives through commercial channels, aided by catchy advertising, has
become known as contraceptive social marketing. This provides an alternative
source of supply, especially for condoms and pills, that can be more congenial
for some users and therefore can expand contraceptive use. To the extent these
are new users or switch from government programs, the considerably lower cost of
social marketing saves public funds; however, users may also switch from purely
commercial outlets.
· Private voluntary
organizations operate a range of distribution systems, some involving clinics
and others concentrating on outreach. Volunteer programs have been critical in
introducing family planning in various settings and are still useful for
reaching specific target groups, such as adolescents, and for providing some
competition and some savings to government programs.
· Additional delivery systems of
many types often coexist with these. Private physicians and midwives often
provide some contraceptive services on their own, although they would often
benefit from specific training in family planning. Health insurance or other
employer-supported programs may cover contraceptive services. Commercial outlets
may be better or worse at supplying contraceptives. Since expanding service
outlets and generally making family planning more available lead to increased
contraceptive use, the multiplication of such distribution systems can be
useful, and public programs should be designed to complement rather than to
discourage them.6
6See World Bank (1993a, pp.
68-69) for an example of how commercial services can be disrupted by a public
program.