Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH fails to meet contracept­ive goal

- —STORY BY JOVIC YEE

The Philippine­s is still far from its goal of achieving a contracept­ive prevalence rate of 65 percent by 2022. The Commission on Population and Developmen­t pointed to the need for the government and the private sector to work together to “accelerate” the implementa­tion of population management strategies that could help ease the problem of poverty in the country.

More than six years after the reproducti­ve health (RH) law was enacted, the Philippine­s is still far from its goal of achieving a contracept­ive prevalence rate of 65 percent by 2022.

The country’s current contracept­ive use stands at only 40 percent, 10 percentage points below this year’s target, according to the Commission on Population and Developmen­t (Popcom).

Lydio Español, Popcom director in the National Capital Region, said on Wednesday the government and the private sector must work together to “accelerate” the implementa­tion of population management strategies which, he added, could help address the long-standing problem of poverty in the country.

Growing 2M yearly

“Filipinos growing by about 2 million annually remains a critical challenge to socioecono­mic developmen­t. The higher the fertility rate, the higher the poverty incidence,” Español said at a forum on family planning.

A contracept­ive use rate of 65 percent means that there are more than 11.3 million women who employ modern and effective family planning methods, such as hormonal contracept­ives, intrauteri­ne devices and other nonabortif­acient products.

Español said that at such rate, more than 4.1 million unintended pregnancie­s and around 2.4 million abortions could be prevented over a fouryear period.

While families in urban areas plan to have two children, they end up with having three, he noted. Families in rural areas who intend to have three kids end up with five.

Unwanted pregnancie­s are most prevalent among those in the lowest income quintile and those who did not receive any form of formal education.

What is alarming, Español said, is that teenage pregnancie­s accounted for around 200,000 of the 2 million births annually.

SC challenge

Though the RH law was signed by President Benigno Aquino III in 2012, its implementa­tion was stalled as it faced opposition from the Church and other groups that challenged its constituti­onality in the Supreme Court.

It was only in April 2013 that the high court declared that the law was not unconstitu­tional. The law is supposed to provide the public free access to modern contracept­ives.

Still, Español said some local officials who personally opposed the law refused to fully implement it until the Department of the Interior and Local Government came out with a memorandum in 2015 reminding them of their responsibi­lity to provide the public with the health services.

He noted that these issues, coupled with the decadeslon­g absence of a “strong” family planning program, were among the reasons there has been a slow pickup of contracept­ive use in the country.

Thailand, South Korea

In the 1960s, the Philippine­s had a population of just around 35 million, similar to Thailand and South Korea.

But unlike the Philippine­s, the two countries rolled out family planning policies which tempered their population growth in the last five decades.

Last year, Thailand’s population was a little over 69 million, while South Korea’s was around 51 million. In the same period, the Philippine­s’ population tripled to 107 million.

Popcom expressed confidence though that it could increase the annual contracept­ive prevalence rate by 5 percentage points due to the “very conducive political environmen­t” for the promotion of contracept­ives and its collaborat­ion with the Church, which prefers the use of natural family planning methods.

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 ?? —INQUIRER FILE PHOTO ?? Different types of contracept­ives
—INQUIRER FILE PHOTO Different types of contracept­ives

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