Reproductive Health

Anurag Mishra

Anurag Mishra
Anurag
Mishra
Senior Technical Specialist, Monitoring and Evaluation
Bio: 

Anurag Mishra is a senior technical specialist at the International Center for Research on Women's (ICRW) Asia Regional Office. In this capacity, he prepares data collection instrument, project reports and monitoring tools and helps evaluate data.

Mishra has more than 12 years of experience monitoring and evaluating programs in India and providing technical assistance to partner institutions that want to expand their efforts. Prior to joining ICRW, he worked for eight years as a program officer at Population Council in New Delhi, where he provided technical assistance and evaluation expertise for a variety of government programs. He also provided monitoring and evaluation support as a consultant for the Constella Group. As a doctoral candidate, Mishra coordinated survey work between the International Institute for Population Sciences and the government.

Expertise: 

Reproductive Health, Engaging Men & Boys, Measurement & Evaluation

Languages Spoken: 

Hindi (native), English (fluent), Punjabi (basic)

Education: 

Mishra has a doctorate in demography and a master’s in population studies from the International Institute for Population Sciences. He also holds master’s degrees in economics and mathematics, and a bachelor’s in mathematics, statistics and economics from Agra University.

Jennifer McCleary-Sills

Jennifer
McCleary-Sills
Senior Social and Behavioral Scientist
Bio: 

Jennifer McCleary-Sills is a senior social and behavioral scientist at the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). In this role, McCleary-Sills uses theory to design and evaluate health programs that serve women, adolescents, and populations in post-conflict regions.

McCleary-Sills brings more than a decade of experience in public health practice and international development, with particular expertise in designing and implementing programs related to sexual and reproductive health, gender-based violence, and HIV/AIDS. Prior to joining ICRW in 2009, McCleary-Sills worked at the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs providing research and evaluation support to field offices for national communication programs. McCleary-Sills also worked with the grants and acquisition department at World Vision and served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Jordan.

McCleary-Sills has worked in more than a dozen countries throughout Latin America, the Middle East and Africa.

Expertise: 

Population and Reproductive Health, Violence Against Women

Languages Spoken: 

English (native), Spanish (fluent), French (fluent), Arabic (proficient)

Education: 

McCleary-Sills holds a doctorate in social and behavioral science from Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health. She earned a master’s degree in international health from the Boston University School of Public Health and a bachelor’s from Yale University in Spanish and international studies.

Anjala Kanesathasan

Anjala Kanesathasan
Anjala
Kanesathasan
Senior Public Health Specialist
Bio: 

Anjala Kanesathasan is a senior public health specialist at the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). In this role, Kanesathasan provides technical and management direction for a range of projects related to health, gender, adolescents and women’s empowerment.  

Kanesathasan brings more than 15 years of experience developing, managing and evaluating health and development projects. She has led multiple efforts at ICRW, including assessing options for increasing women’s agricultural engagement in West Africa and evaluating a program to decrease violence among young men in the Balkans. Prior to joining ICRW in 2007, Kanesathasan directed the behavior change communications component of a large reproductive and child health program in Kenya with PATH. Kanesathasan also has directed communications programs for a social marketing project to promote family planning and prevention of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections in Uganda.  

In addition to her 10 years based in East Africa, Kanesathasan’s field experience includes southern Africa, South and Central Asia, Eastern Europe and the Caribbean.

Expertise: 

Population and Reproductive Health, HIV and AIDS, Adolescents, Violence Against Women, Measurement and Evaluation

Languages Spoken: 

English (native), Tamil (conversational), French (basic), Hindi (basic)

Education: 

Kanesathasan holds a master’s of public health from the University of Michigan and a bachelor’s in modern European history and South Asian studies from Brown University.

Jeffrey Edmeades

Jeffrey Edmeades
Jeffrey
Edmeades
Social Demographer
Bio: 

Jeffrey Edmeades is a social demographer at the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). In this role, Edmeades manages a variety of projects in which he provides technical assistance to partners, designs and conducts program evaluations and executes data analysis. His research primarily focuses on the interaction between the development process and demographic behavior, including fertility, contraceptive use and migration as well as household decision-making processes and the role gender norms play in shaping demographic outcomes.

Edmeades, who joined ICRW in 2006, brings years of experience in studying the effects of rural poverty, gender inequality and reproductive health patterns in the developing world. He also has published a number of peer-reviewed papers that address research methodology and the determinants of reproductive behavior and intimate partner violence, among other topics. His work has appeared in academic publications such as Demography, Social Science and Medicine, Studies in Family Planning and the Journal of Mixed Method Research.

Edmeades has extensive international experience in a number of countries including Canada, Mexico, Ghana, Thailand, England, Ethiopia and New Zealand.

Expertise: 

Population and Reproductive Health, Adolescents, Economic Empowerment

Languages Spoken: 

English (native), Spanish (fluent)

Education: 

Edmeades holds a doctorate in sociology from the University of North Carolina. He earned a master’s in demography and a bachelor's in geography from the University of Waikato, New Zealand.

Madhumita Das

Madhumita Das
Madhumita
Das
Senior Technical Specialist, Men and Masculinity
Bio: 

Madhumita Das is a senior technical specialist at the International Center for Research on Women’s (ICRW) Asia Regional Office. In this capacity, she manages and provides technical support for several projects. Her responsibilities include conceptual and instrument design, program design, training and capacity building, data management and analysis, monitoring and evaluation, dissemination of project results and liaising with donors.

Das has more than 10 years of academic research experience. Prior to joining ICRW, Das was as a senior program specialist at Constella Futures, where she worked on program management, operations research and communications for a project to provide reproductive and child health services in India. Das also worked at the Population Council and as a consultant for Johns Hopkins University.

Expertise: 

Population & Reproductive Health, Violence Against Women, Engaging Men & Boys

Languages Spoken: 

Bengali (native), English (fluent), Hindi (fluent), Assamese (basic), Oriya (basic)

Education: 

Das holds doctorate and master’s degrees in demography from the International Institute for Population Sciences in Mumbai. She also has a master’s in social and population geography from North Eastern Hill University. Das earned a bachelor’s degree in education from Utkal University, and a bachelor’s in geography from North Eastern Hill University.

Improving Reproductive Health Services for Urban Poor

Half of the world’s population now lives in urban areas, and almost all global population growth will occur in towns and cities in developing countries in the coming decades. As the world's urban poor population increases, the need for reproductive health services also is accelerating. The Urban Health Initiative (UHI) addresses family planning and reproductive health needs of the urban poor in India, Kenya, Nigeria and Senegal.

ICRW, through the Measurement, Learning and Evaluation (MLE) project, will conduct rigorous evaluations of the UHI in Uttar Pradesh, India. The goal is to measure the project’s impact on the prevalence of contraceptives, identify which interventions are most cost-effective and which ones are most likely to increase the use of contraceptives among the urban poor. The UHI project will explore a variety of approaches to improve the availability of contraceptives, such as integrating family planning into existing maternal and child health services and improving demand through vouchers. Ultimately, the MLE project aims to assist the Uttar Pradesh government in revitalizing the state’s family planning program in urban areas.

The MLE website features selected research and publications on urban reproductive health, presentations, feature stories and updates on activities. Visit MLE's website to access ICRW's report on the findings from an analysis of the baseline survey results from urban samples in six cities in Uttar Pradesh, India.

Duration: 
2009 - 2014
Location(s): 
India

Prevention of HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections among Married Women in Urban India

A majority of women in India are exposed to HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STI) because of the behavior of their spouses. Yet few interventions focus on addressing the HIV and STI prevention needs of married women. To fill this gap, ICRW launched an innovative four-year program to engage women and couples in culturally-appropriate, HIV/STI prevention programs based in reproductive health clinics. The program partnered with the University of Connecticut and received financial support from the U.S.-based National Institute of Mental Health.

ICRW and partners first gathered baseline information about the nature of reproductive health care for women through interviews with health care providers and married couples. ICRW then designed and implemented an intervention to deliver high quality women- and couple-centered counseling services to empower women. These services also engaged men in how to reduce their risk of sexually transmitted infections. The results of the intervention suggest major policy and programmatic implications for how women-centered services are delivered through India’s public health system.  
 
Related Resources
Duration: 
2008 - 2013
Location(s): 
India

Commentary: Women Are the Epicenter of Haiti’s Renewal

Rebuilding Efforts Should Focus on Women to Make a Difference
Thu, 04/01/2010

For Haiti to recover from the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake, for it to reinvent itself and reposition itself regionally, more than new buildings need to rise. The island nation requires a new social foundation. International donors gathering in New York on March 31 to discuss innovative ideas for Haiti’s future will do well to recognize that their efforts will go farther, faster if women are the center of Haiti’s renewal. 

For Haiti to recover from the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake, for it to reinvent itself and reposition itself regionally, more than new buildings need to rise. The island nation requires a new social foundation. International donors gathering in New York on March 31 to discuss innovative ideas for Haiti’s future will do well to recognize that their efforts will go farther, faster if women are the center of Haiti’s renewal.  

Every nation’s greatest asset is its people, and in Haiti, women’s activities – such as farming and commerce – make up more than three-quarters of the country’s informal economy. That’s significant, because in Haiti, the poorer the household, the more dependent it is on revenue generated by women, regardless of whether that household is headed by a man or a woman.  

Yet despite women’s contributions and strong presence – they are more than half of Haiti’s population – the inequities of Haitian society remain extreme.  Almost 60 percent of Haitian women cannot read or write. Early marriage is common, with 24 percent of girls wedded before the age of 18. Haiti’s fertility rate is the highest in the region, and its maternal mortality rate leads, too, with 670 deaths for every 100,000 children born. Haiti also holds the region’s highest rates of violence against women, which is among the highest in the world.

This was the landscape before the earth shook.

Now, Haiti has the opportunity to reverse inequities, and build a better nation for all of its citizens. It will require creating targeted opportunities for women to participate fully in Haitian society, and have a meaningful role in what stands to be a decades-long reconstruction of their country. But Haiti’s women cannot contribute wholly if they’re not educated and healthy and if they can’t give birth safely or stay free of violence. With that, it’s imperative that the international community make committed investments in Haitian women as central actors in every phase of Haiti’s recovery. Indeed, research conducted during the past 30 years demonstrates that women can play a critical part in social and economic development when they have access to economic resources – such as the right to earn a living, access to credit or the ability to own land; when their education levels rise and their nutrition and health improves; and when the threat of domestic violence diminishes.  When these types of conditions are met, women are better positioned to make a difference.

Given the evidence, it’s critical that officials make Haitian women an integral part of their discussions at the United Nations’ international donors’ conference about Haiti’s future. A call to do this already exists in the Millennium Development Goals and was reiterated earlier this month when the UN convened its 54th Commission on the Status of Women.

What’s more, there are models of practical approaches for creating more equitable societies in developing countries like Haiti. Rwanda is just one example of a country that did it right by using reconstruction as an opportunity to promote gender equality. How? Following the genocide of 1994, Rwanda created one of the world’s most gender equitable constitutions, with mechanisms to support women’s rights at the local, regional and national levels. Lawmakers endorsed legislation and made commitments to end violence against women.

Today, 56 percent of the country’s parliament members are women – the highest representation of female elected officials in the world. Rwanda also created a monitoring body called the Gender Observatory that ensures that equality between women and men is upheld in government at all levels. With a commitment to advancing women’s educational and business skills, Rwanda’s economy has stabilized to what it was before the genocide. In 2008, the country even registered record-high economic growth of 11 percent.

Haiti, too, could experience similar outcomes.

Rebuilding its society without leaving half its people behind – women – but rather, working in partnership with them, can help Haiti have a better chance of emerging from the rubble with a stronger foundation for its renewal.
 



Sarah Degnan Kambou is chief operating officer of the International Center for Research on Women in Washington, D.C. A globally recognized expert in gender relations, she focuses on issues related to health and development. Degnan Kambou holds a doctorate in international health policy and a master’s in public health from Boston University.

Youth Reproductive Health in Nepal

Youth Reproductive Health in Nepal
Is Participation the Answer?

Sanyukta Mathur, Manisha Mehta, Anju Malhotra
2004

ICRW and Engender Health conducted a comprehensive evaluation on the impact of a participatory program on youth reproductive health in developing country settings. This report outlines the methodology, design and conclusions of the evaluation.

(1.21 MB)

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