To help ensure that all Ugandans have access to quality, voluntary FP services, USAID’s Advancing Partners and Communities Project (APC) — led by JSI Research & Training Insitute, Inc. and implemented by FHI 360 in Uganda — supports the Ministry of Health (MOH) to implement a comprehensive approach to community-based family planning (CBFP).
Resources
![Photo of a baby on a chair and a nurse in Liberia](/sites/default/files/baby-chair-liberia-nurse-dominic-chavez-wb-600x300.jpg)
Updated Community Health Systems (CHS) Catalog »
The CHS Catalog draws from policies and related documentation across 25 countries with specific attention to family planning. It is intended for policymakers, program managers, researchers, and donors interested in learning more about the current state of community health systems.
![Photo of people with their arms raised at sunset](/sites/default/files/youth-touching-the-sky_nepal-200x200.jpg)
Dashboard on Youth Sexual & Reproductive Health »
The tool provides views of indicators related to the sexual & reproductive health of people ages 10 to 24 years in select countries in Asia and the Middle East.
![Photo of a woman receiving an injection in her shoulder](/sites/default/files/Ban39.jpg)
Develop an Injectable Contraceptives Strategy »
Use this resource to craft a strategy for building support for community-based access to injectables (CBA2I) among key decision makers in country.
Search for a Resource
![](https://www.advancingpartners.org/sites/default/files/styles/chm_thumbnail/public/sites/default/files/thumbnails/uganda-eop-briefs-thumb.jpg?itok=u0Exummj)
This book provides simple information on 12 methods for healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies, how each method works and what you can expect.
This book provides simple information on 12 methods for healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies, how each method works and what you can expect.
This book provides simple information on 12 methods for healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies, how each method works and what you can expect.
Selon les recherches menées par les Instituts nationaux de la santé des ÉtatsUnis (National Institutes of Health [NIH]), les guéris de la maladie à virus Ébola (MVE) peuvent conserver le virus dans certains fluides corporels (notamment le sperme, le lait maternel, le liquide céphalorachidien) jusqu’à 32 mois après des résultats négatifs au test Ébola.
According to research conducted by NIH, survivors of Ebola virus disease can retain the virus in certain bodily fluids (i.e., sperm, breast milk, spinal fluid) for up to 32 months after testing negative for Ebola. Researchers in Liberia presented these findings during a regional meeting organized by APC in December 2016, thereby demonstrating the value of continuing surveillance of Ebola survivors and the need for regular testing for viral persistence in the semen of male survivors.
![](https://www.advancingpartners.org/sites/default/files/styles/chm_thumbnail/public/sites/default/files/thumbnails/guinea_results_infographic-thumb-french.png?itok=JG8mzHy8)
L’épidémie d’Ébola a gravement affecté le système de santé publique de la Guinée, laissant dans son sillage plus de 1 200 guéris, dont un grand nombre continue à avoir des problèmes médicaux liés au virus.
![](https://www.advancingpartners.org/sites/default/files/styles/chm_thumbnail/public/sites/default/files/thumbnails/guinea_results_infographic-thumb.png?itok=90GUJAqt)
The Ebola epidemic severely impacted Guinea’s public health system and left over 1,200 survivors, many of whom continue to have medical problems related to the virus. From 2016–2018, APC, in collaboration with Guinea’s Ministry of Health, supported surveillance of Ebola survivors and their immediate contacts, rehabilitated and equipped health facilities in the regions hardest hit by Ebola, enhanced health system capacity for managing Ebola survivor care, and worked to reduce stigma and discrimination against survivors.
eux ans après l’épidémie dévastatrice d’Ébola en Guinée, le Centre médical communal (CMC) « Flamboyants » dans la capitale Conakry continue à assurer des services de santé aux guéris d’Ébola et à leurs familles. À Ratoma, le quartier desservi par le CMC Flamboyants, 1761 personnes ont contracté le virus Ébola pendant l’épidémie de 2014-2015, et 83 ont survécu.
Two years after the devastating Ebola epidemic in Guinea, the Flamboyants Community Health Center (CHC) in the capital city of Conakry continues to provide health services to Ebola survivors and their families. Learn more about the work APC has been doing with Ebola survivors in Conakry.
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