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Ashraf A, Ahmed S, Phillips JF. The example of doorstep injectables. In Barkat-E-Khuda, Kane TT, Phillips JF, eds. Improving the Bangladesh Health and Family Planning Programme. Lessons Learned through Operations Research. Monograph No. 5. Dhaka, Bangladesh: International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh, 1997.

Centre for Development and Population Activities (CEDPA). Expanding Contraceptive Choice: Integrating Injectables into NGO Family Planning Services (PDF, 925 Ko). Washington, DC: Centre for Development and Population Activities (CEDPA), Enabling Change for Women's Reproductive Health (ENABLE), U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), 2003.

Family Health International. Série de modules sur la technologie contraceptive et la santé de la reproduction. Les contraceptifs injectables. Research Triangle Park, NC: Family Health International, 1999.

Family Health International. DMPA Provision by Community-Based Reproductive Health Workers in Africa. Research Triangle Park, NC: Family Health International, 2004.

Family Health International. Comment être raisonablement sûr que la cliente n'est pas enceinte. Research Triangle Park, NC: Family Health International, 2006.

Fernandez VH, Montúfar E, Ottolenghi E. Injectable contraceptive service delivery provided by volunteer community promoters. Article non publié. Population Council, 1997.

Garza-Flores J, Moraks del Olmo A, Fuziwara JL, et al. Introduction of cyclofem once-a-month injectable contraceptive in Mexico. Contraception 1998;58(1):7-12.

Lande R, Richey C. Expanding Services for Injectables, Population Reports (PDF, 682 Ko ou HTML), Series K, No. 6. Baltimore, MD: INFO Project, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 2006.

Mirza T, Ashraf A, Kabir H, et al. Training Experience in Domiciliary Injectable Contraceptive Services in the National Family Planning Programme. Dhaka, Bangladesh: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, 1996.

Mirza T, Barkat-e-Khuda AA, Humayun K, et al. Doorstep delivery of injectable contraceptives in eight thanas: key findings. In Barkat-e-Khuda, Mirza T, Ahmed S, eds. Lessons Learned on Doorstep Delivery of Injectable Contraceptives: Workshop Proceedings. Dhaka, Bangladesh: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, 1994.

Phillips JF. A case study of contraceptive introduction: domiciliary DMPA services in rural Bangladesh. Committee on Population National Academy of Sciences Seminar on the Demographic and Programmatic Consequences of Contraceptive Innovations, Washington, DC, October 6-7, 1988.

Phillips JF, Greene WL, Jackson EF. Lessons from Community-based Distribution of Family Planning in Africa (PDF, 238 Ko). New York, NY: Population Council, 1999.

Phillips JF, Hossain MB, Huque AA, et al. A case study of contraceptive introduction: domiciliary depot-medroxy progesterone acetate services in rural Bangladesh. In Segal SJ, Tsui AO, Rogers SM, eds. Demographic and Programmatic Consequences of Contraceptive Innovations (Reproductive Biology). New York, NY: Plenum Press, 1989.

Population Council. Adopting contraception in a traditional African society: findings from northern Ghana. Popul Briefs 1997;3(1):4.

Prata N, Vahidnia F, Potts M, et al. Revisiting community-based distribution programs: are they still needed? Contraception 2005;72(6):402-7.

Price N. Service Sustainability Strategies in Sexual and Reproductive Health Programming: Community-based distribution (PDF, 316 Ko). London, England: DFID Resource Centre for Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2002.

Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH), U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). Introduire dans le cadre des programmes de DMPA la seringue auto-inactivée et la boîte de sécurité pour éliminer les objets tranchants (PDF, 365 Ko). Seattle, WA: PATH, 2001.

Ria C, Thapa S, Bhattarai L, et al. Conditions in rural Nepal for which DMPA initiation is not recommended: implications for community based service delivery. Contraception 1999;60:31-37.

Routh S, Ashraf A, Stoeckel J, et al. Consequences of the shift from domiciliary distribution to site-based family planning services in Bangladesh (PDF, 119 Ko). Int Fam Plan Perspect 2001;27(2):82-89.

Solter C. Comprehensive Reproductive Health and Family Planning Training Curriculum. Module 6: DMPA Injectable Contraceptive (PDF, 553 Ko). Watertown, MA: Pathfinder International, 1997 (version révisée, 1999).

Stanback J, Mbonye A, LeMelle J, et al. Final Report Safety and Feasibility of Community-Based Distribution of Depo Provera. Research Triangle Park, NC: Family Health International, 2006.

Stang A, Schwingl P, Rivera R. New contraceptive eligibility checklists for provision of combined oral contraceptives and depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate in community-based programmes. Bull WHO 2000;78(8):1015-23.

Stoebenau K, Valent TW. Using network analysis to understand community-based programs: a case study from highland Madagascar. Int Fam Plan Perspect 2003;29(4):167-73.

Zuna O, Lopez M, Johnson S. Guidelines for Promoters: Depo Provera. Research Triangle Park, NC: Family Health International, 1998.


Ce document a été produit par Family Health International, dans le cadre du programme CRTU, grâce au soutien financier de l'Agence des Etats-Unis pour le développement international (USAID). Son contenu ne reflète pas nécessairement la politique de l'USAID.

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