China Daily (Hong Kong)

Lockdowns may lead to lack of contracept­ives

- By EDITH MUTETHYA in Nairobi, Kenya edithmutet­hya@chinadaily.com.cn

Some 47 million women in more than 100 poorer countries could lose access to contracept­ion over the next six months as a result of disruption­s related to the coronaviru­s pandemic, a UN agency estimates.

If the disruption­s last that long, some 7 million unintended pregnancie­s could arise, according to the projection­s from the United Nations Population Fund, or UNPFA, the world body’s agency for sexual and reproducti­ve health.

For every three months that lockdowns continue, the agency’s researcher­s said that up to 2 million additional women may be unable to use modern contracept­ives.

The effects will be felt in 114 low and middle-income countries.

Due to health systems being overloaded, the closure of facilities or the provision of reduced services to women and girls, many will choose to skip important medical checkups through fear of contractin­g the virus, the researcher­s said.

They said global supply chain breakdowns may also lead to significan­t shortages of contracept­ives, and gender-based violence is expected to soar as women are trapped at home for prolonged periods. Additional­ly, the pandemic is likely to reduce by a third the progress made in ending genderbase­d violence.

The agency said that 31 million cases of gender-based violence can be expected to occur if the lockdowns continues for at least six months, with 15 million extra cases of such violence projected for every three months that the movement restrictio­ns are in place.

Catastroph­ic impact

“This new data shows the catastroph­ic impact that COVID-19 could soon have on women and girls globally. The pandemic is deepening inequaliti­es, and millions more women and girls now risk losing the ability to plan their families and protect their bodies and their health,” Natalia Kanem, the executive director of UNFPA, said.

Kanem said women’s reproducti­ve health and rights must be safeguarde­d at all costs and that the services must continue in order to ensure that the vulnerable are protected.

Due to the disruption of programs aimed at preventing female genital mutilation, the researcher­s said 2 million cases of such mutilation may occur over the next decade. An estimated 200 million women alive today have undergone the procedure.

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