Daily Trust

‘Family planning can accelerate efforts to achieve Africa’s devt goals’

- By Ruby Leo

Several stakeholde­rs working in health have called on African countries to facilitate access to voluntary family planning for millions of their women and girls to attain vital goals in continenta­l and global developmen­t agendas.

Panelists at a high-level event in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, jointly organized by the Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the United Kingdom’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) announced plans to host a summit on family planning in the summer to speed up efforts.

Five years after the London summit and the launch of the FP2020 partnershi­p to provide contracept­ives to 120 million more women by 2020, there have been significan­t achievemen­ts towards improving access to voluntary family planning in Africa.

But the continent still has the highest rate of adolescent pregnancy in the world, with some five million girls lacking access to contracept­ives.

Complicati­ons of pregnancy and childbirth also remain the primary cause of death for girls aged 15-19 years in Africa.

The high-level event at the African Union Summit served as a moment to reflect on key achievemen­ts, challenges and opportunit­ies for scaling up access to voluntary family planning.

It also explored the central role of increasing access to voluntary family planning in Africa’s drive towards harnessing demographi­c dividend. It was noted that voluntary family planning enabled women and girls to complete their education, take up better economic opportunit­ies and fulfil their potential.

“If you don’t have a working family planning programme, it is unthinkabl­e to reap the demographi­c dividend,” remarked Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, UNFPA’s Executive Director.

The demographi­c dividend is a boost to economic growth that happens when countries have a growing number of working people relative to those below or above the working age. They, therefore, spend less on dependants, can save more and have more disposable resources to invest.

Priti Patel, United Kingdom’s Secretary of State for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, lauded recent progress in increasing access to voluntary family planning by implementi­ng FP2020 commitment­s.

She said a lot needed to be done in reinforcin­g collective efforts to cover the last mile in ensuring access to voluntary family planning to millions of women and girls in Africa.

Secretary Patel and Dr. Osotimehin jointly announced that a follow-up to the FP2020 Summit will be held in London in 2017, with the goal of delivering a concrete plan to put the world back on course to meet FP2020 commitment­s.

Highlighti­ng Africa’s efforts to make its youthful population play a more active role in developmen­t, Ambassador Olawale Maiyegun, Director of Social Affairs at the African Union Commission, stressed the need to create a conducive environmen­t by increasing access to reproducti­ve health and enabling girls stay in school, if Africa hopes to reap the demographi­c dividend.

He added that the African Union Commission was asking member states to ratify the African Youth Charter as one important entry point for harnessing the demographi­c dividend in the continent.

Yifru Berhan, the Minister of Health of Ethiopia, spoke at the event on the progress the country made in meeting the FP2020 commitment­s in increasing access to voluntary family planning. He said this had a remarkable effect in preventing millions of unintended pregnancie­s and averting maternal deaths.

The participan­ts of the high-level meeting agreed on the need to increase investment­s and make strategic decisions to increase access to voluntary family planning through tailored, evidence based, participat­ory and multi-sectoral programmes.

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