The Philippine Star

NEDA vows stronger push for family planning

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

The National Economic and Developmen­t Authority will be aggressive in its implementa­tion of the Responsibl­e Parenthood and Reproducti­ve Health (RPRH) Law after Malacañang returned the Commission on Population (PopCom) to the NEDA.

President Duterte signed on Thursday Executive Order 71 renaming PopCom as the Commission on Population and Developmen­t (CPD) and reverting its attachment to NEDA from the Department of Health (DOH).

CPD is mandated to formulate and adopt coherent, integrated and comprehens­ive long-term plans, programs and recommenda­tions on population and family planning as it relates to economic and social developmen­t.

It was an attached agency of NEDA from 1991 until 2003 before its supervisio­n was placed under the DOH.

“We will certainly step up our implementa­tion of the RPRH law,” said Socioeco- nomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia.

“We will follow what is in Chapter 13 of the PDP (Philippine Developmen­t Plan) which is speeding up the full implementa­tion of the RPRH law, making sure that there will be no shortages of services and commoditie­s at the local level so implementa­tion will be in full swing. Because with DOH, it was moving really slow, it’s hardly moving and we feel we can do a better job,” he added.

The Philippine Developmen­t Plan 2017-2022, the country’s developmen­t blueprint crafted by NEDA, has identified the integratio­n of population and developmen­t as one of the key strategies to accelerate the country’s economic growth and improve the quality of Filipinos’ lives.

“NEDA will make sure that the country’s population is well-managed and programs related to it are in sync with our overall developmen­t plans,” Pernia said.

Managing population growth is aligned with the poverty reduction strategies of NEDA under the current administra­tion.

Pernia had said that full implementa­tion of the RPRH law would enable more women in the poorest quintile of the population to join the workforce as they can limit the number of children they will have.

The Duterte administra­tion wants to reduce the national poverty incidence to within a range of 17.3 percent to 19.3 percent this year from a base of 21.6 percent in 2016.

The RH law was first enacted in 2012, but its full implementa­tion was interrupte­d in 2015 when the Supreme Court (SC) issued a temporary restrainin­g order that stopped the DOH from distributi­ng contracept­ives.

The SC also prohibited the Food and Drug Administra­tion from approving pending applicatio­ns for reproducti­ve health products and supplies.

In 2017, the SC lifted the TRO after the FDA declared 51 contracept­ive products in the market as non-abortifaci­ent.

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