The Importance Of Family Planning

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Family planning allows individual and couples to anticipate and attain their desire number of children and the spacing and timing of their births. It is achieved through use of contraceptive methods and the treatment of involuntary infertility. A women ability to space and limit her pregnancies has a direct impact on her health and well-being as well as on the outcome of each pregnancy.
Women with unmet need are those who are fecund and sexually active but are not using any method of contraception, and report not wanting any more children or wanting to delay the next children. The concept of unmet need points to the gap between women’s reproductive intensions and their contraceptive behaviors.1
At the beginning of Christian era nearly 2000 year ago, World population was estimated to be around 250 million. Human civilization and development took place in rapid speed along with that world population also increased rapidly and as of July 1st, 2015 world population has reached 7.34 billion.2
Attempts to control human reproduction is not entirely a modern phenomenon. Throughout history human beings have engaged in both pro and antinatalist practices directed at enhancing social welfare. In many foraging and agricultural societies a variety of methods such as prolong breastfeeding were used to space birth and maintain an equilibrium between resources and population size. Since 1930 family planning (birth control clinics) have been functioning in the world. In the modern era of