Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Quality sex education starts very early: Melinda Gates

- Sanchita Sharma sanchitash­arma@htlive.com

“Children are curious about their bodies and it’s natural for them to ask questions,” said Melinda Gates, 52, who describes herself as the co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and a mother.

“My girls were seven-10 years old when me, and Bill with our son, went to sex education classes with them. Really good quality sex education starts very, very early,” the philanthro­pist said.

As policy-makers and advocates from around the world meet for the Family Planning Summit in London on Tuesday, Gates explained why family planning is the best buy in global developmen­t.

“A young girl needs to understand her body and understand reproducti­ve health and as a parent, we need to have that conversati­on. You have to start very young and have ongoing dialogues — kids need parents, school, relatives, older sister, community self-help worker for good quality informatio­n so they can make decision about their bodies and get empowered about their bodies,” she said..

The Family Planning Summit 2012 set a goal to give an additional 120 million women in the world’s poorest countries access to lifesaving family planning services and supplies. Since then, modern contracept­ives being used by 300 million women across the 69 of the world’s poorest countries averted 82 million unintended pregnancie­s, 25 million unsafe abortions, and 124,000 maternal deaths.

“We’ve made some great progress… 30 million additional women and girls are using the contracept­ives of their choice (since FP2012),” said Melinda. “By 2020, we want to move closer to reach the goal of universal access and to contracept­ives to ensure every woman can plan her family and future. I’d like to see a little more, but a lot of groundwork has been done.”

Reaching out to adolescent­s is a priority, she said. “Adolescent­s are not being served by the family planning community. With 500 million girls in the world very soon, if we don’t give them family planning options and informatio­n about their bodies, they will get trapped in cycles of poverty,” she said.

The 52-year-old said India was taking the right steps towards imparting education on the family planning front.

“You have Mission Parivar Vikas (accelerate­d access to family planning methods in 146 high fertility districts)… Youth seeks informatio­n and we must use texts, messages on radio, soap operas on TV and Bollywood actors talking about contracept­ives… that kind of campaigns have worked wide.”

Melinda was not unduly worried about United States President Donald Trump’s proposal to withhold funding from abortion providers.

“He’s proposed the cuts, we have to wait for Congress to decide. In the past we’ve had bipartisan support for funding, we’ll know by Fall. We are talking to a lot of people in Congress on how important this money is,” said Melinda.

What’s next is using data to track demand and uptake. “We have to keep the momentum up between now and 2020, get data country-by-country and keep up funding at global level,” said Melinda. ”In 2012, data on contracept­ives was very scattersho­t. Now we have district to district data that shows us how to act, where to go… and for me that is progress. Transparen­cy of data is huge progress,”’ she said.

Youth seeks informatio­n and we must use texts, messages on radio, soap operas on television and Bollywood actors talking about contracept­ives.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India