Marie Josee Mukankuranga stood before
international health and development experts in her home in the Rwamagana
District of Rwanda, talking about her community’s need for family planning.
Ms. Mukankuranga, a community health
worker, explained that villagers visit her to learn about modern contraception.
“I am following up with 35 to 40 clients,” she told them.
Programmes like these receive little
attention, but they are critically important. Voluntary family planning empowers women
to choose if and when to have children, and how many. It enables women to
finish their educations and join the labour force, helping families rise out of
poverty and securing better futures for their children.
Human rights and development imperative
Image:WorldEconomicForum |
Family planning is not only a human right;
it is also a development imperative. In Africa, which has large numbers of
young people, family planning can play a central role in helping to harness a
so-called “demographic
dividend”.
A demographic dividend is a massive
economic boom that can take place when there is a decline in fertility rates,
yielding fewer dependents relative to income-generators. Voluntary family
planning programs, information and services are essential to this process.
Investments are also needed to create a better access to education and decent
employment, and to help ensure gender equality.
“If you don’t have a working family
planning programme, it is unthinkable to reap the demographic dividend,” Dr.
Babatunde Osotimehin, Executive Director of UNFPA, said at a high-level event
organized at the margins of the 2017 Summit of the African Union in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia.
The event, which focused on the importance
of ensuring access to voluntary family planning, was jointly organized by
UNFPA, the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID) and
the Federal Ministry of Health of Ethiopia.
There has since been significant progress
in providing access to voluntary family planning throughout Africa since 2012.
That year, governments and partners committed to reaching 120 million more
girls and women with modern contraceptives by 2020, a promise known as FP2020.
But the continent still has the highest
rate of adolescent pregnancy in the world, with some five million girls lacking
access to modern contraceptives, according to a 2013 UNFPA report.
Complications of pregnancy and childbirth also remain a key cause of death for
girls aged 15-19 years in Africa.
Priti Patel, Secretary of State for DFID,
emphasized that an estimated 225 million women globally want to avoid or delay
pregnancy but are not using modern contraceptives. These women, she said, must
be reached with voluntary family planning. She also announced that a family
planning summit will be convened this summer in London, a joint effort between
the UK government, UNFPA, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and other key
partners. Continue here...
News credit: UNFPA
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