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Reproductive health and ICPD ten years on

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Title: Reproductive health and ICPD ten years on


1
Reproductive health and ICPD ten years on
  • TK Sundari Ravindran
  • 2 September 2005

2
Outline of the presentation
  • ICPD what was its significance?
  • Reproductive health evolution of the concept
    and how it came to be included in the ICPD
    Programme of Action
  • What is happening for the promotion of
    reproductive health 11 years after ICPD?

3
WHAT WAS NEW ABOUT ICPD
4
1. THE WAY IT VIEWED WOMEN
5
IN THE DEMOGRAPHIC APPROACH
  • Women were the tools through which population
    control objectives were achieved
  • Control women to control population

6
IN THE ICPD APPROACH
  • Women are intrinsically valuable
  • Genuine concern about their health and wellbeing
  • Empower them to exercise autonomy
  • - on Reproductive Health and sexual health
    matter
  • - within the context of social, economic and
    political situation
  • Womens health not defined by access and
    availability alone but by their status in
    society- role of health seeking behaviour

7
2. THE WAY IT VIEWED FAMILY PLANNING
8
IN THE DEMOGRAPHIC APPROACH
  • FP was the main tool for controlling population
    growth
  • Effective methods received more emphasis
  • Availability and access were the main concern

9
IN ICPD
  • FP is a not the tool for population stabilization
  • Client convenience and acceptability are as
    important as effectiveness
  • Quality of service is as important as availability

10
3. ICPD MOVED TO REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
11
  • Meeting client needs became an important
    perspective
  • Acknowledged needs beyond FP
  • Therefore talked of addressing reproductive
    health concerns, not just FP
  • RH/FP should not be a womens only problem. Men
    should not only share the burden of
    contraception, but should also be encouraged to
    be responsible and supportive partners

12
WHAT IS RH?
  • Reproductive health is a state of complete
    physical, mental and social wellbeing, not merely
    the absence of disease in matters relating to
    the reproductive system
  • Implies a satisfying and safe sex life
  • Capability to reproduce, and the capability to
    decide if, when and how often
  • to be informed and to have access to safe,
    effective, affordable and acceptable methods of
    FP
  • Safe pregnancy and child birth, and a healthy
    infant
  • Sexual health is not merely counselling and care
    related to reproduction and STDs, but the
    enhancement of life and personal relationships
  • Life Cycle Approach

13
  • The Beijing Womens Conference reiterated what
    ICPD said on RH and RR

14
4. THE WAY ICPD VIEWED INCENTIVES TARGETS
15
ICPD said ... Governments should use the
full means at their disposal to support the
principal of voluntary choice in Family
Planning. ( 7.15 ) Governments are urged
to institute systems of monitoring with a view
to detecting, preventing and controlling abuses
by FP managers and providers to ensure
quality of services (7.17) Governments
should secure conformity to human rights and to
ethical and professional standards in the
delivery of FP and RH services aimed at
ensuring responsible, voluntary and informed
consent. (7.17)
16
Government goals for FP should be defined in
terms of of unmet needs for information and
services. Demographic goals, while legitimately
the subject of government development strategies,
should not be imposed on family planning
providers in the form of targets or quotas for
the recruitment of clients (7.12) Over the
past century, many governments have experimented
with schemes of incentives and disincentives,
in order to lower or raise fertility. Most such
schemes have had only marginal impact on
fertility and in some cases have been
counterproductive. (7.12) Governments are
encouraged to focus most of their efforts for
reducing fertility through education and
voluntary measures rather than schemes involving
incentives and disincentives. (7.22)
17
5. ICPD INTRODUCED THE CONCEPT OFREPRODUCTIVE
RIGHTS
18
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS INCLUDE
  • Reproductive Decision Making
  • Voluntary choice in marriage and family formation
  • Decide number, spacing, timing of children, and
    have the information and the means to do
  • Access to safe contraception, good information,
    follow up
  • Sexual and Reproductive Security
  • Freedom from sexual coercion and violence
  • The Right to Privacy
  • Safety
  • In childbirth, from infections STD, RTIs,
    HIV/AIDS

19
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS INCLUDE (CONTD)
  • Valid for couples and individuals
  • Equity and Equality for men and women, exercising
    choices free from discrimination based on gender
  • Create an environment where people can freely
    make reproductive choices and decisions invest
    in basic social services, education, and health
    care

20
TO RECAP
ICPD was about Womens Equality about RH
instead of FP about Informed Choice against
coercion
21
II. REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH EVOLUTION OF THE
CONCEPTDEVELOPMENT OF THE CONCEPT
22
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda
  • 1830 Right to decision-making regarding
    childbearing raised by Owenite Socialist women
  • 1908 Alexandra Kollantai in her Social bases of
    the Woman Question claimed not only womens
    right to fulfilling work but also their right to
    sexual freedom and control over their own
    fertility

23
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (2)
  • 1915 Emma Goldman and Margaret Sanger defied
    obscenity laws in the US by distributing
    pamphlets on birth control, initiating the US
    birth control movement
  • 1918 National Union Womens Suffrage Societies
    in England expands its objectives to include
    legislative reforms in divorce and legitimacy,
    and pressed for public provision for birth
    control.

24
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (3)
  • 1918 onwards In England, women workers
    organisations support the development of a birth
    control movement under the leadership of womens
    suffrage groups, because of concern over high
    rates of maternal mortality and to free women
    from the bondage of unwanted pregnancies.

25
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (4)
  • 1960s and 1970s The rise of the new wave
    feminist movement in the West. Right to abortion,
    violence against women, medicalisation of womens
    bodies are major issues of concern.
  • Major actions setting up womens health centres,
    campaigning for the legal abortions, demystifying
    medicalisation through womens health resource
    centres .. Major types of actions in womens
    health.

26
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (5)
  • 1977 The first International Women and Health
    Meeting (IWHM) held in Rome, drawing mainly
    European feminist groups
  • 1980s Womens health movement becomes truly
    international, drawing feminist groups from
    developing countries, chiefly Latin America and
    Asia. No to population control, women decide!
    becomes important campaign message alongside
    right to abortion and contraception.

27
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (6)
  • 1984 The fourth IWHM held in Amsterdam, and
    Womens Global Network for Reproductive Rights
    formed from the International Abortion Rights
    Campaign to reflect the changing agenda and
    priorities of the movement.
  • 1987 - 1993 A dynamic womens movement supported
    by a favourable political climate succeeds in
    putting in place womens health policies, in
    Brazil, Columbia and Australia

28
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (7)
  • 1990s There is more dialogue between technical
    institutions such as the WHO and some feminists
    in the womens health movement on issues such as
    contraceptive research and maternal mortality.
    Several meetings held in WHO specifically for
    womens health advocates to meet with scientists.

29
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (8)
  • 1990s The International Womens Health Coalition
    (IWHC) emerges as a major player among those
    willing to engage in dialogue with the
    establishment. They lobby international donor
    organisations, technical and professional
    organisations to expand the MCH/FP agenda.
  • 1993 A pre-ICPD meeting sponsored by IWHC brings
    together more than 500 women and forges a
    consensus position among the diverse voices of
    feminists.
  • Womens Declaration on Population Policies
    which emerged from this process was signed by
    hundreds of womens organisations across the
    globe.

30
Reproductive rights on the feminist agenda (9)
  • 1992-1994 Active participation by some feminist
    groups and NGOs in the Cairo process. Women find
    their way into official delegations and also plan
    for active participation in the ICPD.
  • 1994 ICPD adopts the language of reproductive
    rights and reproductive health, due to a very
    specific configuration and alignment of political
    forces and Vaticans extremist position.

31
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND ICPD PoA 10 YEARS DOWN
THE LINE
32
Comprehensive reproductive health care still a
distant dream?
  • However, a comprehensive reproductive health (RH)
    programme on the ground is a long way off in the
    vast majority of countries. What exists in many
    countries are a few add-on-services such as
    screening and treatment of reproductive tract
    infections and sexually transmitted infections
    superimposed on maternal and child health care
    (MCH) and /or family planning services. In many
    of the countries, HIV/AIDS services are provided
    through a parallel vertical structure.

33
Improvement in population coverage modest
  • Improvement in population coverage also appears
    to have been limited. Only 48 countries (about
    one-third of the total) report having increased
    service delivery points for reproductive health
    services, and the number of countries reporting
    the provision of facilities for post-abortion
    services is even lower at just 15.

34
Affordability worsening
  • Information related to affordability and to
    services for low-income and socially
    disadvantaged groups suggests that very limited
    progress has been made in this regard. Free
    reproductive health services are available in
    public health facilities in less than 10 per cent
    of the countries, and are reported to be
    affordable in another 10 per cent.
    Contraceptives are supplied free of cost or at
    subsidised rates in only 27 countries. Specific
    measures have been taken to provide maternal
    health services to vulnerable groups and/or
    remote areas in only 19 countries and only 12
    countries have taken steps to address the issue
    of transportation for emergency obstetric care.

35
Resources a major challenge
  • Resources are crucial for even significantly
    expanding the
  • coverage of maternal and child health (MCH) and
    family planning (FP) services, without seeking to
    improve quality or increase new services.
  • (e.g.) In the late 1990s 40 of Moroccos
    provinces lacked medical facilities to handle
    obstetric emergencies. At around the same period,
    a third of the population of Burkina Faso lived
    in districts without access to surgical
    facilities including emergency obstetric care.

36
Hostile political environment
  • The concept of Reproductive health is under
    serious attack by fundamentalist forces
    everywhere.
  • However, the opposition of the Bush
    administration has perhaps caused the most damage
    to the progress of reproductive health.
  • Major funding cuts to reproductive health and
    family planning programmes in international
    organisations
  • The global gag rule causing major damage

37
The evaporation of RH policies
  • Political muscle flexing has succeeded in keeping
    reproductive health out of Millennium Development
    Goals

38
The struggle for reproductive health and rights
is ongoing
  • Efforts to keep RH on the agenda continue.
  • This includes the development of an RH strategy
    by WHO which emphasises the centrality of RH for
    achieving MDGsPolitical muscle flexing has
    succeeded in keeping reproductive health out of
    Millennium Development Goals
  • There have been efforts to introduce indicators
    on RH in at least two MDG Task Force reports.
  • UNFPA is actively involved in keeping the RH
    agenda alive.
  • Many NGOs and most importantly, feminist groups,
    continue with their advocacy efforts

39
Reproductive Health - more than a medical or a
health issue
  • Reproductive health is not now, and never has
    been, simply a matter of preventing disease. This
    is because womens ability to bear children is
    linked to the continuity of families, clans and
    social groups the control of property the
    interaction between human beings and their
    environment the relationship between men and
    women and the expression of sexuality. It is
    therefore valuable currency in every society and
    the object of regulation by families, religious
    institutions and governmental authorities.
    (Maine D, Freedman L, Shaheed F et al, 1995)
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