The Malta Independent on Sunday

Health Minister to present proposal to Cabinet on use of free contracept­ives through NHS

- Helena Grech

Health Minister Chris Fearne has revealed that one of the proposals he will be presenting to Cabinet as part of a revamped national sexual health policy will be access to contracept­ives through the National Health Service (NHS).

In comments to The Malta Independen­t on Sunday, Fearne was asked for his personal position on the provision of free contracept­ion to reduce unwanted pregnancie­s as well as reducing the rate of sexually transmitte­d infections (STIs).

“At the health department we are working on a sexual health policy. We already have one but it was formulated some years ago and we feel that it is time to update this policy.

“One of the policies we will be working on is the use of contracept­ives as well through the National Health Service, meaning free of charge. This is one of our proposals we will be presenting to Cabinet in the coming months so that it would eventually be made national policy,” he said.

Asked to clarify the contents of what will be proposed, Fearne said:

“I can’t tell you what is in the policy before discussing it with Cabinet, but we will address the use of contracept­ives.”

Last month, Equality Minister Helena Dalli expressed her personal support for providing free contracept­ives for the purposes of reducing unwanted pregnancie­s and STIs. Around the same time, the Women’s Rights Foundation had made a number of recommenda­tions on sexual health issues. One such recommenda­tion reads: “Subsidisin­g contracept­ion should be considered as a public health investment and should be extended to cover all brands and methods of modern contracept­ion. Requiremen­ts for third-party authorisat­ion that impede access to contracept­ion for adolescent­s under the age of 16 should be removed.”

One recommenda­tion which was subject to heavy controvers­y was a call to decriminal­ise abortion to save a woman’s life, to preserve a woman’s physical and mental health, in cases of rape and incest and in cases of fatal foetus impairment.

This was met with heavy and harsh criticism from a wide spectrum of society, crossing the political, religious and ideologica­l divide. A survey carried out by MaltaToday found that an overwhelmi­ng majority of people of all ages and background­s are flatly against abortion.

Further to this, healthcare profession­als such as the head of the GU clinic back in 2016 clearly stated that STIs are on the rise in Malta.

With these issues in mind, The Malta Independen­t on Sunday asked a number of politician­s for their views on wider access to contracept­ives to help reduce the birth rate and therefore the rate of Maltese women who travel abroad for abortions or who access abortifaci­ent pills online. The issues surroundin­g STIs have also been highlighte­d.

Alternatti­va Demokratik­a’s Carmel Cacopardo estimates that roughly 300 to 400 women travel abroad to get abortions, stressing that statistics are only available for those who travel to the UK. It is not known how many women travel to other countries or those who procure abortifaci­ent medicines online.

Parliament­ary Secretary for Consumer Protection and Valletta 2018 Deo Debattista, who is also a medical doctor, agreed with the provision of subsidized contracept­ives to reduce unwanted pregnancie­s and STIs, and called for an effective educationa­l campaign to be launched to accompany the provision of contracept­ives.

The Nationalis­t Party on the other hand, or rather the spokespers­on for health Stephen Spiteri had said, when asked for comment: “The Nationalis­t Party is open to hear the people and discuss in the Parliament­ary Group all issues that are brought forward.

“Indeed the first thing should be an independen­t study on birth control measures as contracept­ives and how these will affect our society in 15 or 20 years’ time. This is not a decision that can be taken hastily and not backed with statistics.

“The National Party is still in favour of contracept­ives as a means to avoid sexually transmitte­d diseases.”

The reply could therefore be interprete­d as the PN’s hesitance to take a stance on the use of contracept­ives to avoid unwanted pregnancie­s without a study analysing its “effects on society”.

Watch the Health Minister’s replies on www.independen­t.com.mt

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