Contraception is not only a woman’s responsibility
A woman should be able to exercise the right to decide the spacing, timing and number of children she wants
Every 12 minutes an Indian woman dies from pregnancy-related complications. Access to reproductive healthcare and information, could have prevented these deaths. Although it is a woman who carries a child, ironically, she often does not have the freedom to decide whether, when and how many children she wants. Enabling women to exercise this right can ensure that every pregnancy is wanted.
Family planning is a key health intervention which has a direct impact on the health of mothers and children by ensuring that women have access to birth spacing methods. When couples use family planning, they are able to care for their families better. Families should prepare to meet the needs of mothers and children and have the necessary financial resources to ensure the health of the family. If this is not properly addressed, it adversely affects the ability of the mother to access and ensure her reproductive health, subsequently impacting the health of the child.
However, family planning is not only about contraceptive use. Women should also have access to information and to a range of contraceptive choices. This means that women need information and access to safe, effective and affordable methods of birth control. In addition, access to reproductive health services and education programmes that stress on the importance of family planning for safe pregnancy and childbirth, would improve the health of mothers and their children.
On September 26 every year, we observe ‘World Contraception Day’. This global initiative aims to raise awareness about family planning and envisions a world where every pregnancy is wanted. In India, there is a disproportionate burden on women to use contraception, across all sections of society. According to the latest National Family Health Survey, female sterilisation remains the preferred method of contraception across India (36% of married women aged 15-49 years), while male sterilisation is extremely low (0.3%). Women and men are both responsible and should participate equally in family planning, yet women continue to bear the brunt of this burden. Men need to share this responsibility with women and make informed choices about family planning.
Women deserve the opportunity to make their own decisions about their health and their futures. No country can reach its full potential if half of its population is disempowered. When women and girls are empowered to plan their families, they are more likely to stay in school, participate in their communities, and join the workforce. Women’s health, empowerment and family planning are all inextricably linked. We cannot advance the former without investing in the latter.