Overview
The Population Council’s involvement in Nigeria began in the 1960s when it collaborated with the Ministry of Health to implement a safe motherhood project in Calabar, a region in southeastern Nigeria. From then until 2005, the Council undertook occasional operations research projects in Nigeria that were managed from New York, Nairobi, or the Council's regional office in Accra. In 2006, the Council established a Nigeria country office in Abuja charged with carrying out a four-year cooperative agreement with USAID (funded under the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief) to develop the capacity of local institutions to undertake HIV prevention programs among vulnerable youth in northern Nigeria.
Program focus
The Population Council’s program in Nigeria aims to address the maternal and reproductive health needs of vulnerable populations, provide programming targeted at HIV/AIDs prevention, and empower local NGOs to better address health, education, and quality-of-life issues in their communities. The program currently focuses on the northern regions of Nigeria, where communities tend to be destitute and isolated from services.
In the past, Council work in Nigeria focused on operations research in reproductive health and family planning. This work included testing interventions to reduce maternal mortality, assessing the prevalence of unsafe abortion, training researchers to conduct situation analyses, and testing interventions to promote dual-protection practices among women and their male partners. Since 2006, the Council has focused heavily on prevention of HIV transmission among vulnerable young people in northern Nigeria, as it implements activities supported through its four-year partnership with USAID. These activities aim to strengthen the capacity of Nigerian organizations, including faith-based organizations, to design, manage, support, monitor, and expand HIV-transmission-prevention activities for young people. Emphasis is placed on addressing the particular vulnerabilities of married adolescent girls, taking into account cultural contexts. Over the next five years, Council staff will also undertake intervention research to reduce HIV transmission and maternal morbidity and mortality, especially among first-time mothers.
Highlights of past and present work
- Procuring and distributing magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) in health-care facilities, and training health-care providers on its use in the prevention and management of eclampsia and pre-eclampsia (major contributors to maternal deaths in Nigeria).
- Establishing a network of Safe Space Youth Clubs for vulnerable girls in northern Nigeria to promote social networking, knowledge transfer, and skills acquisition in a socially, religiously, and culturally acceptable context.
- Conducting workshops to train community advocates to provide HIV/AIDS-prevention information to pre- and postmarital adolescent girls and key community stakeholders, including religious and community leaders, politicians, heads of households, mothers-in-law, and husbands of married adolescents.
- Training community advocates linking young girls with HIV counseling and testing, STI screening, premarital religious/spiritual counseling, antenatal-clinic visits, maternal–child health clinics, testing for prevention of vertical transmission of HIV/AIDS, and antiretroviral therapy for those who are HIV-positive.
- Conducted research to highlight the potential risk factors for HIV-infection-transmission among married adolescent girls in northern Nigeria.
- Organized and conducted participatory rapid-development radio workshops that brought together stakeholders interested in protecting young girls by helping them to stay in school and delay marriage. Over a one-week period, participants developed, produced, and pretested a series of radio spots, which were aired and reinforced with a series of popular radio call-in shows. The Council hopes to continue this project and to introduce similar rapid radio-message development and dissemination activities across the country. (PDF)
- Conducted "The Days of Dialogue," a series of consultations and trainings with religious leaders and faith-based organizations that established a common platform for discussing issues of health, marriage, and education for young girls from a religious perspective.
Banner photo: © Beryl Goldberg
Projects
ECafrique (more)
The African Forum on Emergency Contraception, or ECafrique, is a bilingual, international network of health care and business professionals that seeks to increase the availability of high-quality emergency contraception (EC) services in Africa.
(1/2002 - ongoing)
Access to contraceptive methods
Men’s Health Network Nigeria: Providing Appropriate and Comprehensive Sexual Health and HIV Prevention Services (more)
The Men’s Health Network Nigeria seeks to ensure that all men in Nigeria receive appropriate, comprehensive sexual health and HIV prevention services and targets populations considered most at risk.
(10/2008 - 10/2013)
HIV prevention; Men who have sex with men; Mobile populations; Stigma and discrimination
Addressing Child Marriage in Northern Nigeria (more)
Council researchers conducted a survey and intervention designed to address issues surrounding child marriage in Nigeria.
(11/2005 - 11/2009)
Child marriage
Administering Magnesium Sulfate to Treat Severe Pre-eclampsia and Eclampsia (more)
Council research helped educate health providers on hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and administration of magnesium sulfate as a treatment for pre-eclampsia and eclampsia.
(2/2008 - 12/2008)
Child marriage; Safe pregnancy/antenatal and delivery care
Resources
Legacy and policy in fertility transition: A comparative study of Indonesia and Nigeria (abstract) (PDF)presentation at the XXVI IUSSP International Population Conference, Marrakech, Morocco, 1 October
McNicoll,Geoffrey
Publication date: 2009
The adolescent experience in-depth: Using data to identify and reach the most vulnerable young people (HTML)
series of 51 data guides by country
Publication date: 2009
The adolescent experience in-depth: Using data to identify and reach the most vulnerable young people--Nigeria 2003 (PDF) (HTML)
Publication date: 2009
The Men's Health Network, Nigeria (MHNN): Social networking, social franchising, new technologies, and traditional prevention for high-risk men, including MSM (abstract) (PDF)
poster presentation at 5th International AIDS Society (IAS) Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, Cape Town, South Africa, 19-22 July
Karlyn,Andrew; Adebajo,Sylvia; Nwachukwu,Chukwuemeka; Darby,Heather; Tun,Waimar; Kellerman,Scott E.
Publication date: 2009
Men's perceptions of masculinities and sexual health risks in Igboland, Nigeria (abstract) (PDF)
Odimegwu,Clifford; Okemgbo,Christian N.
International Journal of Men's Health 7(1): 21-39
Publication date: 2008
Casamento infantil no contexto da epidemia do VIH [Child marriage in the context of the HIV epidemic] (PDF)
Bruce,Judith
Promover transições para a idade adulta saudáveis, seguras e produtivas Sumário (N 11)
Publication date: 2007
HIV prevention project for vulnerable youth in northern Nigeria
Publication date: 2007
The experience of married adolescent girls in northern Nigeria (PDF)
Erulkar,Annabel S.; Bello,Mairo
Publication date: 2007
The HIV/AIDS prevention project for vulnerable youth in northern Nigeria: Community advocates training manual (PDF)
Population Council/Abuja; Adolescent Health and Information Projects; Federation of Muslim Women's Associations in Nigeria; Islamic Education Trust
Publication date: 2007
Facts about adolescents from the Demographic and Health Survey--Statistical tables for program planning: Nigeria 2003 (PDF) (HTML)
Publication date: 2006
Child marriage briefing: Nigeria (PDF)
Child Marriage Briefings
Publication date: 2005
Approaches to researching women's reproductive health (PDF)
Population Briefs 10(2)
Publication date: 2004
Approaches to researching women's reproductive health [Arabic] (PDF)
Population Briefs 10(2)
Publication date: 2004
« Mon père pensait autrement » : des garçons nigérians réfléchissent à l'égalité entre les sexes ['My father didn't think this way': Nigerian boys contemplate gender equality] (PDF)
Girard,Françoise
Quality/Calidad/Qualité (no. 14)
Publication date: 2003
'My father didn't think this way': Nigerian boys contemplate gender equality (PDF)
Girard,Françoise
Quality/Calidad/Qualité (no. 14)
Publication date: 2003
Selected DHS data on 10-14-year-olds (HTML)
annexes by country to Facts about Adolescents from the Demographic and Health Survey: Statistical Tables for Program Planning
Publication date: 2003
Selected DHS data on 10-14-year-olds: Nigeria (PDF) (HTML)
annex to "Facts about adolescents from the Demographic and Health Survey: Statistical tables for program planning"
Publication date: 2003
Facts about adolescents from the Demographic and Health Survey--Statistical tables for program planning: Nigeria 1999 (PDF) (HTML)
Publication date: 2002
Promoting dual protection in family planning clinics in Ibadan, Nigeria (abstract) (PDF)
Adeokun,Lawrence; Mantell,Joanne E.; Weiss,Eugene; Delano,Grace Ebun; Jagha,Temple; Olatoregun,Jumoke; Udo,Dora; Akinso,Stella; Weiss,Ellen
International Family Planning Perspectives 28(2): 87-95
Publication date: 2002
What about us? Bringing infertility into reproductive health care (PDF)
Friday,Okonofua; Datta,Bishakha
Quality/Calidad/Qualité (no. 13)
Publication date: 2002
Facts about adolescents from the Demographic and Health Survey: Statistical tables for program planning (HTML)
series of DHS data tables by country
Publication date: 2001
Facts about adolescents from the Demographic and Health Survey--Statistical tables for program planning: Nigeria 1990 (PDF) (HTML)
Publication date: 2001
The acceptability of the female condom: Perspectives of family planning providers in New York City, South Africa, and Nigeria (abstract)
Mantell,Joanne E.; Hoffman,Susie; Weiss,Eugene; Adeokun,Lawrence; Delano,Grace Ebun; Jagha,Temple; Exner,Theresa M.; Stein,Zena A.; Karim,Quarraisha Abdool; Scheepers,Elma; Atkins,Kim; Weiss,Ellen
Journal of Urban Health 78(4): 658-668
Publication date: 2001
Predominance of subtype A and G HIV type 1 in Nigeria, with geographical differences in their distribution (abstract)
Peeters,Martine; Esu-Williams,Eka; Vergne,Laurence; Montavon,Celine; Mulanga-Kabeya,Claire; Harry,Takena; Ibironke,Akinsete; Lesage,Denis; Patrel,Delphine; Delaporte,Eric
AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 16(4): 315-325
Publication date: 2000
Ethnicity and child mortality in sub-Saharan Africa (PDF)
Brockerhoff,Martin; Hewett,Paul C.
Policy Research Division Working Paper (no. 107)
Publication date: 1998
Women's experiences of unwanted pregnancy and induced abortion in Nigeria (PDF)
Okonofua,Friday E.; Odimegwu,Clifford; Aina,Bisi; Daru,P.H.; Johnson,A.
Robert H. Ebert Program on Critical Issues in Reproductive Health Publication Series
Publication date: 1996
Using situation analysis data to assess the functioning of family planning clinics in Nigeria, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe (abstract)
Mensch,Barbara S.; Fisher,Andrew A.; Askew,Ian; Ajayi,Ayorinde
Studies in Family Planning 25(1): 18-31
Publication date: 1994
Prevention of morbidity and mortality from induced and unsafe abortion in Nigeria (PDF)
Okonofua,Friday E.; Ilumoka,Toun
Robert H. Ebert Program on Critical Issues in Reproductive Health Publication Series
Publication date: 1991
Nigeria Fast Facts
| Population (millions) | 152.6 |
|---|---|
| Total fertility rate | 5.7 |
| Infant deaths per 1,000 live births | 75 |
| Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births | 1100 |
| Girls aged 20-24 married by age 18 (%) | 43 |
| HIV/AIDS prevalence (%) | 3.1 |
| Living below US $2 per day (%) | 84 |
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