70% Reduction in Maternal Deaths Within Reach
December 3, 2009 at 7:14 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a commentTags: donors, Guttmacher, maternal mortality, Report, UNFPA
NEW STUDY FINDS 70% REDUCTION IN MATERNAL DEATHS AND NEARLY 50% DECLINE IN NEWBORN DEATHS ARE WITHIN REACH
Targeted Investments Can Also Radically Reduce Unintended Pregnancies and Unsafe Abortion, and Lower Poverty Levels
3 DECEMBER 2009, LONDON – Maternal deaths in developing countries could be slashed by 70% and newborn deaths cut nearly in half if the world doubled investment in family planning and pregnancy-related care, shows a new report by the Guttmacher Institute and UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund. Currently, more than half a million maternal deaths and 3.5 million newborn deaths, many of them easily preventable, occur each year, in developing countries.
The new report, Adding It Up: The Costs and Benefits of Investing in Family Planning and Maternal and Newborn Health, also found that investments in family planning boost the overall effectiveness of every dollar spent on the provision of pregnancy-related and newborn health care. Simultaneously investing in both family planning and maternal and newborn services can achieve the same dramatic outcomes for $1.5 billion less than investing in maternal and newborn health services alone.
“Investing in a handful of basic health services, like family planning and routine delivery care, can save millions of women and babies,” says Dr. Sharon Camp, President of the Guttmacher Institute. “It’s not rocket science. These are mostly simple services that can be provided inexpensively at the local level, supplemented by provision of urgent care when needed.”
Adding it Up documents that the benefits of meeting the need for both family planning and maternal and newborn health services would be dramatic. Compared with the current situation:
- the deaths of nearly 400,000 women and 1.6 million infants would be prevented;
- unintended pregnancies would decline by more than two-thirds;
- unsafe abortions and resulting complications would both drop by about 75%; and
- a host of other benefits would occur, including reduced poverty and increased economic development in poor countries.
The new report shows that the total investment needed is $24.6 billion – a little more than double the current spending.
“It is a win-win situation. We know what must be done, we know what it will cost, and we now know that the needed investment is modest in relation to the vast benefits that will follow,” says Ms. Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA.
Currently, the world spends approximately $12 billion a year on family planning and maternal health programmes in developing nations, with developing countries and families providing the bulk of the total. Still, research shows that 215 million women who want to avoid pregnancy are not using an effective method of contraception, and only about half of the 123 million women who give birth each year receive the antenatal, delivery and newborn care they need. Millions of those with major complications get no treatment and either die or suffer from severe and debilitating conditions such as obstetric fistula.
Investing in family planning and maternal health, would also have profound additional benefits the report shows: Increases in condom use for pregnancy prevention would simultaneously curb transmission of HIV and other STIs; preventing unwanted pregnancies would increase women’s educational and employment opportunities, enhancing their social and economic status; and family savings and investment would rise, spurring economic growth and reducing poverty. These advances would make social and economic development goals easier to achieve.
“It is critical to the progress of the world’s most disadvantaged countries and regions to address the high rates of maternal and newborn death that have long been endemic. Investing simultaneously in family planning and in maternal and newborn health is cost-effective,” says Ms. Obaid.
“The report outlines how to best focus resources to achieve the greatest gains. Investing in women has enormous benefits, not just for individuals and families, but for societies as a whole. It can truly transform the future of developing nations,” added Dr. Camp.
Regional fact sheets accompany the report, providing a more focused look at the benefits of investing in family planning and maternal and newborn health in Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean (also en español), Sub-Saharan Africa (also en français) and the Arab countries (also in Arabic). In addition, the report’s executive summary is available in Arabic, French and Spanish.
Report on Satellite Session ‘Population Dynamics, SRHR and Climate Change: Why Do Linkages Matter?’
November 6, 2009 at 3:16 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a commentTags: Global Partners in Action, Report, satellite meeting
A report on the satellite session ‘Population Dynamics, SRHR and Climate Change: Why Do Linkages Matter?’ which took place during the Global NGO Forum September 1st in Berlin is now available at the Global NGO Forum website.
IPPF report ‘Contraceptives at a Crossroads’
July 29, 2009 at 2:41 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a commentTags: contraception, Funding, IPPF, Report, RH Supplies
IPPF recently launched a report entitled “Contraceptives at a Crossroads”. The report states that because of stalling on political and financial commitments hard won gains regarding contraceptive security in many parts of the world are at risk of being lost. The authors furthermore point out that the increasing demand for contraceptives, especially in developing countries, will not be met as long as the problems that prevent reproductive health supplies from being funded, developed, manufactured, and delivered to those who need them, are not understood. The aim of the report is “to synthesize the vast array of issues, structures, players and processes that impact whether women and men can access thereproductive health services that they need and want, when and where they need them, and to provide recommendations on moving forward“.
A pdf-version of the report can be found at the IPPF website
PAI’s Dr. Karen Hardee on BBC
June 15, 2009 at 11:23 am | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a commentTags: PAI, Report, RHSupplies, Sub-Saharan Africa
PAI’s Dr. Karen Hardee spoke to BBC Radio’s Network Africa about PAI’s new report, ‘Reproductive Health Supplies in Six Countries: Themes and Entry Points in Policies, Systems and Funding’ .
The report identifies the challenges faced by reproductive health programs
in Bangladesh, Ghana, Mexico, Nicaragua, Tanzania and Uganda and calls
for renewed attention to reproductive health supplies to avoid putting
the health of millions of women at risk. The show was broadcast
throughout Sub-Saharan Africa.
For more information please visit PAI’s website.
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