THE PACKARD FOUNDATION’S ETHIOPIA POPULATION SUB-PROGRAM: AN EVALUATION REPORT FOR THE PERIOD 1998-2007

Ethiopia is the second most populous country in Africa with an estimated 77 million people, whose median age is 18 years, and 43 percent of whom are below 14 years of age. With a population growth rate of 2.5 percent, Ethiopia is one of the fastest growing populations in the world and will exceed 150 million people by 2040 (UN 2007). Following the recognition that the country’s population and reproductive health indicators were neither optimistic nor consistent with national aspirations for food security, universal primary education, increased access to health services, extended employment opportunities and overall economic development goals, the Ethiopian Government adopted a population policy in 1993, to harmonize the country’s population growth rate with its national economic development agenda. In furtherance of these goals, the government established the National Office of Population (NOP) with the responsibility of coordinating institutions and ministries involved in population activities and launched the Health Sector Development Program (HSDP) and the Poverty Reduction Strategy Program (PRSP). […]

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Population and Health Dynamics in Nairobi’s Informal Settlements: Report of the Nairobi Cross-sectional Slums Survey (NCSS) 2000 *

This report documents demographic characteristics and health conditions of Nairobi City’s slum residents based on a representative sample survey of urban informal settlement residents carried out from February to June 2000. The aims of the “Nairobi Cross-sectional Slums Survey (NCSS)” were to determine the magnitude of the general and health problems facing slum residents, and to compare the demographic and health profiles of slum residents to those of residents of other areas in Kenya. Modeled after the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), which have been conducted in Kenya and many other developing countries, the study was designed to provide comparable data to the 1998 Kenya DHS so that health indicators in the slums could be contrasted with estimates for Nairobi as a whole, rural areas, and other urban settlements. In addition to general indicators measured in the DHS, the NCSS obtained information on a range of other issues including general, health, and reproductive health problems faced by slum residents. […]

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