Provider Behavior Change and SBC Approaches to Quality of Care in Family Planning

31 Jan 2023

Webinar Recording (English │ French)

Resources Highlighted during Webinar and Other Related Resources

Advancing SBC Measurement for Family Planning

28 Feb 2023
Links to webinar recordings, slide deck, synthesis document, and resources highlighted during the webinar

SBC and the Enabling Environment for Family Planning

21 Mar 2023
Links to webinar recordings, slide deck, synthesis document, and resources highlighted during the webinar

Costing for Family Planning SBC

19 Apr 2023
Links to webinar recordings, slide deck, synthesis document, and resources highlighted during the webinar

Breakthrough RESEARCH is USAID’s flagship social and behavior change (SBC) research and evaluation project to drive the generation, packaging, and use of innovative SBC research to inform programming. A six-year project (2017–2023), Breakthrough RESEARCH was led by the Population Council in collaboration with our consortium partners: Tulane University, Avenir Health, Population Reference Bureau, Institute for Reproductive Health at Georgetown University, and ideas42. Our approach is to foster collaboration and shared learning, ensure SBC programs are based in ‘what works’, elevate the impact of evidence-based SBC programs, and put evidence into practice. Breakthrough RESEARCH did this by assessing the evidence, identifying priority research questions, designing, and implementing research studies to fill evidence gaps and strengthen programs, and synthesizing and packaging evidence for use.

Within the breadth of our research portfolio, Breakthrough RESEARCH has four main project legacy areas: provider behavior change; integrated SBC; advancing SBC measurement; and costing and cost-effectiveness of SBC. For each of these legacy areas, Breakthrough RESEARCH has curated a collection of resources highlighting the state-of-the-art evidence and the tools and guidance produced by the project over the past six years to advance evidence-based SBC programming.