Browse Health Policy Project (2010-2016) Materials
- Advocacy
- Best Practices
- Capacity Development
- Child Protection
- Civil Society Engagement
- Contraceptive Security
- Costed Implementation Plan
- Costing
- Demographic Dividend
- Efficiency & Effectiveness
- Equity
- Family Planning/Reproductive Health
- FP2020
- Gender
- Gender-based Violence
- GeoHealth Mapping
- Governance, Stewardship & Accountability
- Health Financing
- Health Systems Strengthening
- HIV
- ImpactNow
- Integration
- Leadership
- Malaria
- Maternal Health
- Men having Sex with Men
- Millennium Development Goals
- Modeling
- Monitoring & Evaluation
- Non-Government/Community Service Org.
- OneHealth
- Orphans and Vulnerable Children
- Other Health Domains
- Parliamentarians
- People Living With HIV
- People who Inject Drugs
- Policy
- Private Sector
- RAPID
- Religious Leaders/FBOs
- Repositioning Family Planning
- Scale-up
- Sex Workers
- Spectrum
- Stakeholder Engagement
- Stigma and Discrimination
- Sustainable Financing
- Transgender
- Universal Health Coverage
- Urban and Rural Poor
- Women
- Youth
- GAP Tool
- MDG Briefs
- Nigeria Health Financing Conference
- Nigeria RAPID
- Respectful Maternity Care
- Stigma Package
- Ghana RAPID
- OCA Suite of Tools
- CIP Resource Kit
- Central Asian Republics
- Côte d'Ivoire
- Dominican Republic
- E&E
- Ethiopia
- Ghana
- Global
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- India
- Jamaica
- Jordan
- Kenya
- LAC
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Mali
- Mozambique
- Nepal
- Nigeria
- Russia
- South Africa
- Tanzania
- Uganda
- Ukraine
- West Africa
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
Country and regional assignments reflect those made at the time of production and may not correspond to current USAID designations.
Files will load from www.healthpolicyproject.com.
List entries are alphabetical by title and contain the title, abstract, and then the filename which is hyperlinked and will open in a new browser window. Most files are PDFs. There may be multiple files per abstract.
RAPID
More recent RAPID publications are available.The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Ashanti region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 612_GhanaAshantiRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 2625.13 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Brong Ahafo region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 610_GhanaBrongAhafoRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 3062.39 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Central region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 606_GhanaCentralRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 1835.06 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Eastern region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 614_GhanaEasternRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 3087.79 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Greater Accra region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Northern region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 601_GhanaNorthernRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 1857.44 kb
In 2013, the USAID-funded Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a Ghana RAPID application. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The presentation uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. The presentation also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- Ghana RAPID: The Change We Seek (booklet) 154_GHANARAPIDBookletFINAL.pdf 2776.92 kb
- Ghana RAPID: The Change We Seek (presentation) 154_GHANARAPIDFINALV.pdf 3146.07 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Upper East region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 618_GhanaUpperEastRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 1556.34 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Upper West region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 616_GhanaUpperWestRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 1793.51 kb
The Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the National Population Council (NPC) of Ghana, supported the development of a RAPID application for the Western region in Ghana. The NPC, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Ghana and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, and economic growth. The brief uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Ghana's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. It also highlights the policies the government must put in place to benefit from the demographic dividend.
- 604_GhanaWesternRegionRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 1451.73 kb
Energy is extremely expensive in Jordan, and 97 percent of all energy used in Jordan is imported. Energy costs are equivalent to nearly 21 percent of the total annual gross domestic product; energy costs are equivalent to 32 percent of the value of all annual imports; and energy costs are equivalent to the value of 83 percent of all exports. As the population grows, so will the consumption of energy, and consequently, the expenses to provide the amount of energy required in the future. If Jordan is to meet its future needs for energy, it must address multiple issues, including the scarcity of local oil, rising prices of oil in the international market, critical and serious supply-demand imbalances, costly new sources (infrastructure and operating), and the increasing pressure on resources from changes in population, development, and lifestyles. Resolving these issues will take a concerted effort and commitment from the government and the people of Jordan; and each of these issues needs to be addressed in multiple and different ways. One of the least expensive approaches that can be taken immediately, and is the underlying theme of this presentation, is to reduce population growth.
This RAPID presentation, developed by the Health Policy Project in collaboration with the Jordan Higher Population Council, demonstrates that future population growth will directly affect the ability of Jordan to provide sufficient energy resources. While reducing population growth will not be sufficient in eliminating all of the energy issues facing the country, it is a necessary step that needs to be taken in combination with many others if Jordan is to successfully resolve its pressing energy situation.
- 255_EnergySectorRAPIDRAPIDCover.pdf 501.01 kb
Jordan’s continued economic development and concomitant population growth is putting increased pressure on natural resources and the environment. Over the past 40+ years, the gap between the ecological footprint and the local capacity has grown, and this deficit has largely been made up for by importing goods, especially food and energy, from abroad.
Productive land in Jordan is limited. Only 11 percent of the total land area can be considered agricultural land---of which less than 2 percent is arable; the rest is ranges and forests. As population size increases, so does the need for more land to produce food and build houses, businesses, recreation areas, schools and health facilities, roads, and mosques, as well as other supporting uses.
This RAPID presentation, developed by the Health Policy Project in collaboration with Jordan's Higher Population Council, demonstrates that future population growth will directly affect the use of land in Jordan. While reducing population growth will not be sufficient in eliminating all the pressures being placed on the land, it is a necessary step that needs to be taken in combination with many others if Jordan is to successfully resolve its pressing land use situation.
- 256_LandUseRAPIDRAPIDcover.pdf 990.91 kb
This presentation aims to raise awareness about the impact of rapid population growth on Malawi’s development. It includes projections of population growth from 2008 to 2040 based on two hypothetical population scenarios. One scenario assumes that women in Malawi will continue to have 5.7 children on average during their lifetime, while the other scenario assumes a gradual decline in fertility to three children per woman. The first scenario with continued high fertility shows the population growing from about 13 million people in 2008 to 38 million people in 2040. By contrast, the second scenario with lower fertility shows an increase from about 13 million people to 30 million. By 2040, Malawi would have over 8 million fewer people if women were to have three children instead of nearly six.
These projections demonstrate the impact that rapid population growth can have on various sectors, such as education, health, agriculture and food security, environment and land use, and the labour force and employment.
- 71_NationalMalawiRAPIDFebFINAL.pdf 11636.10 kb
This briefing book aims to raise awareness about the impact of population growth on Malawi's development. It includes projections of population growth from 2008 to 2040 based on two hypothetical population scenarios. One scenario assumes that women in Malawi will continue to have 5.7 children on average during their lifetime, while the other scenario assumes a gradual decline in fertility to 3 children per women. The first scenario with continued high fertility shows the population growing from about 13 million in 2008 to 38 million in 2040. By contrast, the second scenario with lower fertility shows an increase from about 13 million in 2008 to 30 million in 2040. By 2040, Malawi would have more than 8 million fewer people if women were to have three children instead of nearly six.
These projections demonstrate the impact that rapid population growth can have on various sectors, such as education, health, agriculture and food security, environment and land use, and the labor force and employment. In the case of education and health, a slower population growth rate results in less pressure on the government budget to provide free primary education and public health services.
- 69_MalawiBooklet.pdf 2624.00 kb
This 2-page briefer aims to raise awareness about the impact of rapid population growth on Malawi's development.
- 70_MalawiBriefEnglish.pdf 2068.00 kb
In 2011, the Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the Family Planning Action Group (FPAG), supported the development of a Nigeria RAPID application. The FPAG, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Nigeria and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, economic growth, and national security. This package of materials uses RAPID projections to highlight the impact of Nigeria's population growth on national development and its ability to provide education, health, and nutrition to all its citizens. By lowering average fertility, savings in primary education and health could amount to $37 billion and $45 billion, respectively, by 2040.
Also see the RAPID package of materials highlighting the impact of high fertility on maternal and child health: Nigeria RAPID Population and Development: Why Fertility Affects Health.
- Nigeria RAPID (PPT Presentation) 36_FINALRAPIDPopDevelNovFORWEBfinal.pdf 4564.00 kb
- Nigeria RAPID (Brief) 36_NigeriaBriefRAPIDFINAL.pdf 2368.61 kb
- Nigeria RAPID (Poster) 36_PosterFinal.pdf 2433.67 kb
In 2011, the Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the Family Planning Action Group (FPAG), supported the development of a Nigeria RAPID application. The FPAG, comprising governmental and nongovernmental organizations, focuses on the state of family planning in Nigeria and the need for more support and funding for the national family planning program. “RAPID” stands for “Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development,” and it is a tool designed to help policymakers understand the relationships between fertility, population growth, health, education, agriculture, economic growth, and national security. This package of materials uses RAPID projections to highlight the large unmet need for family planning in Nigeria and its impact on maternal and child health. By lowering average fertility in the country, 31,000 maternal deaths and 1.5 million child deaths could be averted by 2021.
Also see the RAPID package of materials highlighting the impact of rapid population growth on the country's development: Nigeria RAPID Population and Development: How Fertility Affects Development.
- Nigeria RAPID (PPT Presentation) 37_FINALRAPIDNigeriaFertilityMCHNovFORWEfinal.pdf 3947.00 kb
- Nigeria RAPID (Infographic) 37_InfographicFinal.pdf 798.20 kb
- Nigeria RAPID (Brief) 37_NigeriaBriefFPFINAL.pdf 4930.41 kb
In 2014, the Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), supported the development of a subnational family planning advocacy booklet in Adamawa, Nigeria. Using Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development (RAPID), this booklet highlights the impact of the state’s low contraceptive use and high population growth on its development prospects, principally its ability to provide education, health, nutrition and employment to all its citizens.
- 430_RAPIDAdamawaBookletEmail.pdf 9741.36 kb
In 2014, the Health Policy Project, in collaboration with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), supported the development of a subnational family planning advocacy materials in Adamawa, Nigeria.Using the Resources for the Awareness of Population Impacts on Development (RAPID) model, this brief highlights how smaller families would relieve pressure on the provision of primary education and public health services, and alleviate food insecurity as well as unemployment in Adamawa state by 2050.
- 658_BriefRAPIDAdamawa.pdf 2629.57 kb
“Population, Development, and Family Planning: The Urgency to Act” highlights the health benefits and cost savings associated with meeting all unmet need for family planning in nine francophone West African countries by 2030. If governments invested in meeting family planning needs, an estimated 500,000 infant deaths and 7,400 maternal deaths could be averted over the next decade. Similarly, if the nine governments invested US$84 million in family planning services over the next decade, they would save $195 million needed for programs to reach the Millennium Development Goals by 2020. In other words, for every dollar invested in family planning programs, governments could save US$2.30 in reduced expenditures for maternal health, malaria, immunization, education and water and sanitation programs.
Dr. Johanna Austin Lucinda Benjamin, Director of Primary Health Care and Disease Control of the West African Health Organization, presented these findings at the West Africa regional conference on Population, Development and Family Planning, held in Ougadougou, Burkina Faso, on February 8–11, 2011.
- 29_WestAfricaRAPIDMDGFrancaisFeb.pdf 2167.00 kb
This policy brief highlights the USAID-funded Health Policy Project's application of the RAPID model to forecast integrated data and evidence on population and socioeconomic projections for the Amhara region. The analysis can support experts and policymakers to engage in data-driven decision making, planning, budgeting, and monitoring and evaluation of regional population issues linked with related factors such as the economy, education, health, agriculture, and urbanization. The projections were made according to the Central Statistical Agency 2012 Intercensal Population Survey’s low and high variants for 2007 to 2037.
- 383_EthiopiaRAPIDBriefFINAL.pdf 1159.77 kb
The Health Policy Project (HPP) offers user-friendly software, computer models, and tools to help in-country partners understand the magnitude of health challenges, explore policy and resource options, and set priorities as they develop strategies to improve the health of their citizens. The project has recently completed a series of fliers on some of HPP’s useful tools and approaches. They provide excellent overviews of the following:
- Costed Implementation Plans
- DemDiv
- ImpactNow
- RAPID
- OneHealth Tool
- GeoHealth Mapping
- DMPPT
For your convenience we have also included our flier on all Software and Models. You can download the tools from our Software and Models page.
- Costed Implementation Plans flyer 874_CIPonepager.pdf 321.27 kb
- DMPPT flyer 874_DMPPTflyer.pdf 278.66 kb
- DemDiv flyer 874_DemDivflyer.pdf 274.81 kb
- GeoHealth flyer 874_GeoHealthflyer.pdf 534.76 kb
- ImpactNow flyer 874_ImpactNowflyer.pdf 251.69 kb
- OneHealth flyer 874_OneHealthflyer.pdf 305.80 kb
- RAPID flyer 874_RAPIDflyer.pdf 320.32 kb
- Software and Models flyer 874_SoftwareandModelsflyer.pdf 227.75 kb
- 874_Toolsandapproachesseries.zip 2203.93 kb