Skip to main contentAbout USAID Locations Our Work Public Affairs Careers Business / Policy
USAID: From The American People - Link to USAID Home Page Telling our Story New health clinic replaces a weekly mobile health unit - Click to read this story
Telling Our Story
Home »
Submit a story »
Calendars »
FAQs »
About »
Stories by Region
Asia »
Europe & and Eurasia »
Latin America & the Carribean »
Middle East »
Sub-Saharan Africa »
 
 
 


Indonesia
USAID Information: External Links:

Philippines - Nonita de la Peña in her Mindinao electrical store   ...  Click for more stories...
Click for more stories
from Asia and the Near East  
Search
 

RSS Feed Icon RSS Feed for Recent Telling Our Story Updates
 

Success Story

The typical Indonesian family now has fewer than three children
Birth Spacing Empowers Indonesians
A mother of two, Rubeha Purwanto (left) confers with her community nurse/midwife, Erna Genasih, in West Jakarta
Photo: USAID/ Virginia L. Foley
A mother of two, Rubeha Purwanto (left) confers with her community nurse/midwife, Erna Genasih, in West Jakarta
“Family planning remains very much a national priority,” said President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. Indonesia is home to one of the world’s largest and most successful family planning programs.

Today, Indonesia is recognized as an international leader in family planning and reproductive health. It has one of the world’s most successful programs. As a result, women like Rubeha Purwanto are now able to space the births of their children, improving the health of both mother and child.

In the 1960s, Indonesian women routinely had six children, at least two of whom would die before reaching school age. Realizing that preventing rapid population growth was important to both Indonesia’s future and to its families’ wellbeing, the Indonesian government launched a national family planning program in 1967, with technical and financial assistance from USAID.

The program strongly emphasizes having participants think strategically about whether and when to have children. The program’s focus on community participation has helped strengthen perceptions that smaller families are acceptable and even desirable. The program’s impact has been far-reaching, empowering women, making small and healthy families a normal and popular phenomenon, decreasing maternal and child mortality, and promoting national economic development. The country’s fertility rate is now 2.6 children per couple, and more than 60 percent of married couples practice birth spacing.

The Indonesia program overseen by the National Family Planning Coordinating Board and the Ministry of Health has been so successful that the country “graduated” from USAID population assistance funding in September 2006.

By allowing women and families to make important decisions about their future and providing them access to advice and services, Indonesia’s family planning program empowers Indonesians to take more control of their lives.

Print-friendly version of this page (533kb - PDF)

Click here for high-res photo

Back to Top ^

 

About USAID

Our Work

Locations

Public Affairs

Careers

Business/Policy

 Digg this page : Share this page on StumbleUpon : Post This Page to Del.icio.us : Save this page to Reddit : Save this page to Yahoo MyWeb : Share this page on Facebook : Save this page to Newsvine : Save this page to Google Bookmarks : Save this page to Mixx : Save this page to Technorati : USAID RSS Feeds Star