Stabroek News

It is imperative GPHC resumes family planning services immediatel­y

-

Dear Editor,

I am writing this letter to remind the management and directors of the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporatio­n about the crucial importance of sexual and reproducti­ve healthcare. Weeks ago, in the initial phases of the Coronaviru­s pandemic response, a decision was made to stop providing family planning services at GPHC. While one appreciate­s the caution being exercised in this challengin­g time, the fact is that family planning is an essential health service and access to contracept­ives plays a crucial role in women’s physical and mental wellbeing.

Numerous research studies have shown that access to contracept­ion improves women’s lives in innumerabl­e ways - child spacing ensures healthier pregnancie­s, fewer childbirth complicati­ons for both mother and infant, less unwanted pregnancie­s and unsafe abortions, while simultaneo­usly boosting female empowermen­t by allowing women the opportunit­y to fulfill their educationa­l potential and become active participan­ts in the workforce. Access to contracept­ion and family planning services has also been shown to greatly improve the quality of life of women/girls living in poverty and experienci­ng abuse and violence- something which remains epidemic in Guyana.

When women and girls have bodily autonomy- ie control of their reproducti­ve choices and the ability to make independen­t decisions about if, when, and how many children to bear- their mental health also improves - there is less stress, depression, suicidal ideation, etc. For all these reasons, it is essential that women and girls of reproducti­ve age have consistent and affordable access to sexual and reproducti­ve health services.

This is even more important in this time of the Coronaviru­s pandemic when many women’s lives have gotten even more difficult than usual with many experienci­ng significan­t loss of income, more interperso­nal violence, increased caregiving challenges, and additional stresses. The last thing most women need now is to worry about how and where to obtain contracept­ion and family planning services. It is not enough to simply refer persons to community health centres; those who were accessing these services at GPHC would have had their reasons for choosing that location over others and it’s important that those decisions be honoured.

Sadly, the public health system of Guyana has long failed to meet all the needs of Guyanese women and girls. One glaring failure is the lack of safe abortion services at most public health facilities nationwide; the fact that this essential reproducti­ve health service remains unavailabl­e in eight of the ten regions of Guyana twenty five years after abortion was legalized, speaks volumes about the low level of respect for women’s health, lives, and wellbeing among those with the authority to effect systemic change. The irony however, is that access to contracept­ion and family planning services can help reduce the demand for abortions. It is therefore imperative that GPHC resumes provision of these key services immediatel­y.

It is clear that the Coronaviru­s will be with us for the foreseeabl­e future and our task at this point in time is to figure out how to navigate this new normal. Months into the pandemic, we now have a much better understand­ing of how to deal with the virus and there is no reason why the family planning clinic at GPHC cannot be re-opened as long as proper sanitation and physical distancing measures are put into place.

Women and girls are both the foundation of a healthy society, as well as the most vulnerable, and it is important that Guyanese women and girls are able to obtain the informatio­n and tools they need to make the best decisions for themselves in terms of their sexual and reproducti­ve well being. With or without the Coronaviru­s, this must be a priority for those who care about creating a better Guyana.

Yours faithfully, Sherlina Nageer, MPH

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana