0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views19 pages

Kgmu College of Nursing Lesson Plan: Role of National, International and Voluntary Organization in Family Planning

1. The lesson plan discusses the role of national, international, and voluntary organizations in family planning. It defines family planning and lists its objectives such as avoiding unwanted births and regulating birth intervals. 2. Services that support family planning include education and counseling, contraception provision, infertility management, and sex education. Organizations provide related activities like genetic counseling and adoption services. 3. The small family norm advocates for limited family sizes and is promoted through mass communication. Adopting this norm benefits families by better meeting basic needs, improving income, nutrition, and use of resources while also supporting maternal and child health and education.

Uploaded by

Neha Singh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views19 pages

Kgmu College of Nursing Lesson Plan: Role of National, International and Voluntary Organization in Family Planning

1. The lesson plan discusses the role of national, international, and voluntary organizations in family planning. It defines family planning and lists its objectives such as avoiding unwanted births and regulating birth intervals. 2. Services that support family planning include education and counseling, contraception provision, infertility management, and sex education. Organizations provide related activities like genetic counseling and adoption services. 3. The small family norm advocates for limited family sizes and is promoted through mass communication. Adopting this norm benefits families by better meeting basic needs, improving income, nutrition, and use of resources while also supporting maternal and child health and education.

Uploaded by

Neha Singh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 19

KGMU COLLEGE OF NURSING

LESSON PLAN
ON
ROLE OF NATIONAL, INTERNATIONAL AND VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATION IN FAMILY PLANNING

SUBMITTED TO- SUBMITTED BY-


MS. MONICA NANCY NEHA SINGH (OBG)
CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR M.SC. NURSING I
KGMU COLLEGE OF NURSING KGMU COLLEGE OF NURSING
SUBMITTED ON- 11/01/2020
EVALUATION CRITERIA FOR TEACHING

Name of the teacher: MS. NEHA SINGH Date: 8/04/20

Course and year: M.Sc (N) 1st YEAR Name of evaluator: Ms. MONICA NANCY

Topic: ROLE OF NATIONAL, INTERNATIONAL AND VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATION IN FAMILY PLANNING

S.N PARAMETERS MAX MARKS


o. MMARKS OBTAINED
(50)
A Lesson plan (14)

Statement of objective 1

Content-adequacy, relevance &organization 5

Teaching learning activities 3

Recapitulation 1

Assignment 1

References 1

Neatness 1

Punctuality of submission 1

B Class room environment 2


(Cleanliness,lighting,ventilation etc.)

C Teacher (9)

Personality (posture, facial expression, gait& grooming) 2

Eye contact 1
Voice 2

Language 2

Sense of humour 1

Confidence 1

D Teaching (23)

Introduction 1

Mastery over subject matter 4

Explanations 3

Illustrations and correlations 2

Questioning technique 2

Audio visual aids 3

Teacher student interaction 2

Summary of recapitulation 2

Evaluation 2

Assignment 1

References 1

E Time management (2) 2

Total 50

Comment:
Signature of Teacher Signature of Evaluator
NEHA SINGH
GENERAL INFORMATION:

Name of the student teacher Neha Singh


Subject Obstetric and gynecological nursing
Topic Role of national, international and voluntary organization in family planning
Group M.Sc. Nursing 1st Year
Place KGMU College of Nursing
Duration 45 Minutes
Methods of teaching Lecture cum discussion
AV Aids White Board, Power Point, chart, , flash card
Previous Knowledge Student have some knowledge regarding the topic
General Objective At the end of the lesson students will be able to enhance knowledge regarding the topic.
Specific Objective At the end of the class, students will be able to,

 To define family planning


 To enlist the objectives of family planning.
 To enlist the services that make family planning possible.
 To describe the small family norm and its importance.
 To explain the role of national and international voluntary organization in supporting
family planning.

LEARMING
S. TIME SPECIFIC CONTENT AND
No OBJECTIVE TEACHING EVALUATI
. ACTIVITY ON

1. 2min. To define family Definition Of Family Planning


planning
Family planning is a way of thinking and living that it is adopted voluntary T- Defining the Define family
upon the basis of knowledge, attitude and responsible decision by person and topic. planning?
couple in order to provide the health and welfare of the family group and thus
contribute effectively to the social development of a country-WHO S- Listen to the
teacher carefully.

T- Enlist the
Objectives Of Family Planning:- objectives of
To enlist the family planning What are the
2. 2min.  To avoid unwanted births. methods
objectives of objectives of
 To bring out wanted births.
family planning. S- Listen to the family
 To regulate the interval between pregnancies
teacher carefully. planning?
 To control the time at which birth occurs in relation to the age of
parents.
 To determine the number of children in the family.

T- Explaining the
Services That Make This Practice Possible Are:-
services that
 Education and counselling on family planning. make family What are the
To enlist the  The provision of contraception. planning possible. sevices that
services that make  The management of infertility.
S- Listen to the make family
3. 4min. family planning  Education about sex and parenthood.
teacher carefully. planning
possible.  Organizationally related activities such as genetic and marriage possible?
counselling, screening for abnormalities and adoption services.

Small Family Norm And Its Importance


T- Describe the
All the efforts are being made through mass communication that the concept is small family
accepted , adopted into the lifestyle of the people. The norm in relation into norm and its
To describe the family size, implies a pattern which sets the limits of any community’s fertility importance. What are the
small family norm behaviour. The size of family affects the quality of life of human beings. small family
and its importance. S- Listen to the norm and its
teacher carefully. importance?
Family size affects the family in following spheres of life:-
4. 3min.
-Basic human needs

-Income and growth of economy and savings.

-Food and nutrition, quality and quantity.

-Use of land and urban public system.

-Health especially that of mothers of child.

-Education particularly that children.

ROLE OF NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTARY T- Explaining the


ORGANIZATION IN SUPPORTING FAMILY PLANNING
role of national What are the
and international role of
To explain the role
of national and International agencies voluntary national and
international organization in international
voluntary 1. World health organization supporting family voluntary
organization in 2. United nation international children emergency fund planning. organization
supporting family 3. United nation fund for population activities in supporting
5. 35min. planning. 4. World bank S- Listen to the family
teacher carefully. planning.

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

The World Health Organization (WHO) develops guidance through a process


that begins with systematic review and assessment of research evidence on
key public health questions. Then, WHO convenes working groups of experts
from around the world. The working groups assess the implications of the
evidence and make recommendations for health care services and practice.
Policy-makers and program managers can use these recommendations to write
or update national guidelines and program policies.

The FP Global Handbook is published by the World Health Organization and


Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health’s Center for Communication
Programs, with support from the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID). The Global Handbook represents a collaborative
effort to provide high-quality, up-to-date guidance for health-care
professionals working in low- and middle-income countries.

The new edition includes information about available and new methods,
including the LNG-IUD and implants, long-acting reversible methods;
subcutaneous depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-SC), with the
potential for self-injection; and the new progesterone-releasing vaginal ring
for breastfeeding women. Other updates include:
 Recommendations from other WHO guidance on topics such as
intimate partner violence, task sharing, and serving clients with
disabilities.

 A new section on how family planning providers should respect,


protect, and fulfil the human rights of their clients.

 New job aids on whether to use the pregnancy checklist or a pregnancy


test and on counselling women who want progestin-only injectables
where HIV risk is high.

Written in plain terms and organized for quick reference, the Global
Handbook is widely considered to be an essential resource on contraceptive
methods for health-care professionals. More than 500,000 copies have been
distributed in 13 languages since its first publication in 2007.

The Global Handbook is one WHO’s Four Cornerstones of Family Planning.


Together, the four cornerstones support the safe and effective provision and
use of family planning methods.

UNFPA

UNFPA works at every level to improve access to family planning and


empower individual choices, partnering with governments, NGOs,
community-service organizations, faith-based organizations, youth groups and
the private sector. With its partners, UNFPA helps to strengthen community-
based and youth-friendly reproductive health services, and to provide these
services during humanitarian crises.

UNFPA also works to integrate family planning services into primary health
care, so that women and girls are able to access information and
contraceptives no matter what health facility they visit. 

UNFPA is a key partner in the Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) global


partnership, which aims to reach an additional 120 million women and girls
with contraceptive services in 69 of the poorest countries in the world by
2020. To meet this goal, and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals,
UNFPA is focusing on four key areas:

1. Investment in adolescents and youth

2. Effective and efficient supply chain management

3. Sustainable financing to ensure provision of family planning supplies


and services

4. Quality of care  in family planning service

With its current strategic plan, UNFPA aims to achieve three world-changing


transformative results: ending maternal deaths, ending unmet need for family
planning, and ending gender-based violence and harmful practices. Providing
family planning information and services is a critical part of these efforts.
UNITED NATION INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN EMERGENCY
FUND

The board also asked UNICEF Executive Director James Grant to submit a
policy paper "on the involvement of UNICEF in family planning, taking into
account the health of the child and the mother." The paper is to be presented
for the consideration of the board at its regular session next year, with a view
to approving it prior to the ICPD.

He said UNICEF should not be concerned with family planning because there
were other agencies entrusted with that mandate. Responding to the support
given by Nordic countries to the UNICEF resolution, Klink said that wealthy
nations must not impose dictates as to the "appropriate" size of poor families.

"The Holy See would not propose that UNICEF halt its current balanced,
informational approach to the spacing of births," he said. "Families must be
free to decide their size.

“UNICEF, he pointed out, had clearly stated that it was not involved in
abortion or sterilization and did not provide contraceptives. "UNICEF must
continue to respect cultural and religious diversity," he said. At a meeting of
the Preparatory Committee of the UN Conference on Environment and
Development (UNCED) 
WORLD BANK

The World Bank contributes to alleviating the unmet need for family planning
by helping women realize their preferred reproductive health preferences in
order to increase families’ wellbeing, and accelerate economic growth and
poverty reduction.

Our Sahel Women Empowerment and Demographic Dividend Project


(SWEDD) aims to increase demand for family planning and improve gender
equality to reduce fertility and improve women’s bargaining and economic
potential. SWEDD addresses both supply-side issues related to family
planning services (i.e. commodities and health workers), while focusing on
women’s and girls’ empowerment.

It is a country-driven financing partnership that brings together, under national


leadership and ownership, stakeholders in reproductive, maternal, newborn,
child and adolescent health (RMNCAH), to accelerate efforts to end
preventable maternal, newborn, child and adolescent deaths by 2030 and
improve the health and well-being of women and children.

The World Bank’s global practice for health, nutrition and population is
committed to helping countries accelerate progress towards achieving
universal health coverage, including family planning and other reproductive
health services. The challenge is huge, but progress is happening and is
making a difference for many women, children and families.
INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTARY AGENCIES FOR FAMILY
PLANNING

1. The Rockefeller foundation


2. Ford foundation
3. Cooperative for assistance and relief everywhere

THE ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION

.
Issues of family planning and concerns over population growth have long
interested the Rockefeller family and their philanthropies. A variety of
projects relating to these interests have received Rockefeller support over the
past century.

Concern with family planning issues among the Rockefeller philanthropies


began with John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who developed an interest through his
involvement with the Bureau of Social Hygiene (BSH).
In addition to funding the BSH, JDR Jr. also contributed privately to causes
that the BSH was unable or unwilling to support. Following a request by
Margaret Sanger’s American Birth Control League for $10,000 to fund
research into contraception methods, RF trustee, Raymond Fosdick, expressed
his thoughts on the importance of the proposed research

FORD FOUNDATION

It has now been 52 years since the Ford Foundation began funding population
control programs in the developing world. The Ford Foundation was also
instrumental in convincing the government of India of the dire need to control
its population growth, and in teaching the government about contraceptives.
The government then conducted a vast population control program, replete
with coercion and serious human rights violations.

An internal reorganization in 1997 combined the Reproductive Health and


Population section with Ford’s domestic welfare programs into a new section,
labeled “Human Development and Reproductive Health.” Because of this
reorganization, it is not possible to make accurate monetary comparisons
between Ford’s post-1997 population grants and earlier funding. Population
Council, received $6 million from Ford, while the Alan Guttmacher Institute
received $1.6 million. Perhaps the most effective way to evaluate Ford’s
current population priorities is to examine what groups are now receiving
large Ford contributions. The following organizations all received Ford funds
sometime in the past five years
COOPERATIVE FOR ASSISTANCE AND RELIEF EVERYWHERE

Cooperation for American Relief to Everywhere (CARE) was established in


response to the needs of the people after World War II through the distribution
of food and clothes.

The primary objective of CARE was to alleviate the suffering brought about
by severe food shortages and to expand the program to mitigation and
development. This approach was based on the premise of a community-based
development philosophy and as an implementation strategy for reaching the
rural poor. The five programmatic areas highlighted by the CARE projects
were the rural and urban infrastructure; water and sanitation; small-scale
irrigation; reproductive health and HIV/AIDS; and microcredit. On the other
hand, the family planning and HIV/AIDS project aimed to improve the
knowledge, attitude and practice of rural communities towards family
planning and reproductive health through community-based family planning
services.

ROLE OF NATIONAL VOLUNTARY HEALTH AGENCIES IN


FAMILY PLANNING

1. Family planning association of India


2. All India women conference
3. Indian red cross society

FAMILY PLANNING ASSOCIATION OF INDIA


Family Planning Association of India (FPA India) is a social impact
organisation delivering essential health services focusing on sexual and
reproductive health in 18 states of India. Established in 1949, FPA India has
seven decades of experience in the field of sexual and reproductive health. It
works in close partnerships with central and state governments, NGOs and
national and international funding agencies.

ACTIVITIES

 FPAI runs clinics providing family welfare services including MTP


and sterilization.
 It conducts mobile camps in rural areas.
 It conducts training programmes for doctors, para-medical workers,
volunteers and opinion builders in the area of family planning.
 It has two Regional Training Centers at Hydrabad & Gwalior.

TRAINING PROGRAMMES

 FPAI imparts education about population control, family life, safe sex
and prevention of STDs & AIDS.
 It organizes seminars, workshops and conferences.
ALL INDIA WOMEN CONFERENCE

All India Women’s Conference (AIWC), organization dedicated to improving


women’s education and social welfare in India. The All India Women’s
Conference (AIWC) is one of the oldest women’s organizations in the
country. Several hundred local AIWC branches are located across India, with
thousands of members engaged in work on a range of issues, including
education, development, economic empowerment, and social welfare.

Women as Agents of Change

“However, women have knowledge and coping strategies that give them a

practical understanding of innovation and skills to adapt to changing

Environmental realities as well as to contribute to the solution.

If the traditional wisdom possessed by women as stewards of natural

resources is recognised and built upon, it can provide rare insights into age

old mitigation strategies. If this is complimented with access to new and

emerging technologies, women can indeed transform the conditions not

only in their homes but across the globe.

Technology Informatics Design Endeavours (TIDE) is an organisation

promoting sustainable development through technological interventions.


The role of technology for women’s energy needs and socio-economic

development is not adequately understood by predominantly male

technology developers, often with limited understanding of the energy and

livelihood needs of poor, rural women.

INDIAN RED CROSS SOCIETY

The Indian Red Cross's programmes are grouped into four main core areas:
Promoting humanitarian principles and values; Disaster response; Disaster
preparedness; and Health and Care in the Community.

Red Cross promotes the Humanitarian values, which encourage respect for


other human beings and a willingness to work together to find solutions to
problems. From the seven fundamental principles, the movement aims to
influence the behaviour of all the people.

Maternity and Child Welfare:


Maternity and Child Welfare schemes of National Headquarters were started
in 1954 to extend Maternal and Child Development activities for the Weaker
Section of the Community. The welfare activities are being continued through
various Hospitals, Sub Centres and Bal Vikas Kendras.

Family Welfare
These are run by different states and district branches. All Red Cross MCW
hospitals and centers, as well as family welfare clinics, carry out family
welfare work. They motivate eligible couples to adopt small family norms and
provide them with contraceptives and other family planning devices. Many of
these centers are equipped to meet motivational and clinical arrangements

Family planning is a way of thinking and living that it is adopted voluntary upon the basis of knowledge, attitude and responsible decision by
SUMMARY person and couple in order to provide the health and welfare of the family group and thus contribute effectively to the social development of a
country-WHO. Objectives Of Family Planning:-to avoid unwanted births, to bring out wanted births, to regulate the interval between
pregnancies, to control the time at which birth occurs in relation to the age of parents, to determine the number of children in the family.Services That Make
This Practice Possible Are, education and counselling on family planning, the provision of contraception, the management of infertility, education about sex
and parenthood, organizationally related activities such as genetic and marriage counselling, screening for abnormalities and adoption services.
All the efforts are being made through mass communication that the concept is accepted , adopted into the lifestyle of the people. The norm in relation into
family size, implies a pattern which sets the limits of any community’s fertility behaviour. The size of family affects the quality of life of human beings.

ASSIGNMENT
Write role of national, international and voluntary organization in family planning.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

 PARK.K, Textbook Of Preventive And Social Medicine,23th Edition, Bhanot Publications, Page 226-231
 Basavanthappa, Textbook Of Community Health Nursing Practice, Jay Pee Publication,Page-468
 Gulani K.K.A Textbook Of Community Health Nurse.Kumar Publishing2016;45-49
 www.WHO.com
 www.unicef.in

You might also like