https://www.selleckchem.com/products/4sc-202.html In Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), modern contraceptive prevalence is low by international standards 29.6% as of 2020. A 2015 pilot study demonstrated the feasibility and acceptability of using medical and nursing students to administer DMPA-SC (the subcutaneous injection) among other methods at the community level. The more far-reaching discovery was the potential of clinically trained students to increase access to low-cost contraception in the short-run, while improving the quality of service delivery for future generations of healthcare providers. Scale-up involved integrating the family planning curriculum into the training of nursing students, including classroom instruction in contraceptive technology and service delivery, coupled with a year-long field practicum in which students offered a range of contraceptive methods during intermittent outreach events, door-to-door distribution or sales from their homes. Starting in 2015, a multi-agency team consisting of an international non-govir family planning training in their work. We describe the multiple challenges faced during the scale-up process and in planning for expansion to additional schools.Contracting-out is increasingly utilized as a health system strengthening strategy in lower- and middle-income countries (LMICs), to expand access to health interventions known to reduce child mortality. Existing scholarship suggests its effect has been mixed, limiting a definitive conclusion on its magnitude and direction. There are few studies assessing the impact on under-five mortality rate (U5MR) and fewer evaluations to-date have focused on Sub-Saharan Africa. We test the hypothesis that the contracting-out approach implemented in South Sudan in 2012 led to an observable reduction in U5MR. We use a novel approach, the synthetic control method to construct a synthetic South Sudan from a panel of LMICs using data from the World Bank Developmental