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13/12/11 : DFID accelerating contraceptive provision worldwide

Britain will save the lives of thousands of women by providing urgently needed contraceptive supplies, International Development Minister Stephen O'Brien announced on 29th November 2011 at the International Conference on Family Planning in Senegal. Britain's support with these contraceptives will prevent more than 2 million unintended pregnancies and avert nearly 220,000 unsafe abortions, many of which result in life-threatening complications such as bleeding and organ damage.

Stephen O'Brien said the funding for the UN's Population Fund (UNFPA) will provide at least 1.6 million implants for women across the developing world so they can decide for themselves whether, when and how many children to have.  It will ensure women in countries such as Mali, where the prevalence of contraception is only 8% compared with 82% in Britain, receive implants, which are long-acting but reversible methods of birth control.  In addition, Britain is backing a rapid response-style unit which will procure and deliver up to 6 months worth of contraceptive supplies to countries where stocks are running out to give local providers an opportunity to find lasting solutions.

Speaking at the International Conference on Family Planning in Dakar, Senegal, International Development Minister Stephen O'Brien said "Family planning is a smart, simple and extremely cost effective investment of aid. It is at the centre of all our development work and we are going to ensure more women are given the choices they want and deserve."

British support to UNFPA is part of Britain's commitment to enable at least 10 million more women and girls to use modern contraception methods by 2015 to reduce the unmet need for family planning.  Britain's overall commitment to maternal health will directly contribute to preventing more than 5 million unintended pregnancies and to saving the lives of at least 50,000 women during pregnancy and childbirth and 250,000 newborns by 2015.


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12/12/11 : Family Planning Conference Brings New Funding and Declarations of Support

Senegal’s Minister of Health announced his country’s pledge to double its investment in family planning, while the British Department for International Development (DFID) pledged an additional £35m in funding for family planning programs in developing countries. These two groundbreaking announcements were pivotal moments at the global conference in Dakar, Senegal, held between 29th November and 2nd December 2011 where over 1,500 participants have gathered to share best practices.

Senegal’s funds are designated to increase contraceptive supplies, improve maternal health facilities and increase the number of midwives in health clinics. This initiative aims to increase contraceptive prevalence from 12% to 45%, and to half the country’s maternal mortality rate; currently, at 400 deaths per 100,000 births. “At the end of the day, family planning is a development issue… African governments need to provide financing from their own pockets to provide [it],” said Senegal’s Minister of Health and Prevention, Moudou Diagne Fada.

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11/12/11 : Declaration in support of Global Campaign for access to Safe Abortion launched at Dakar International Family Planning Conference

The following declaration was released at the International Conference on Family Planning that took place in Dakar, Senegal between 29th November and 2nd December 2011.

The need to integrate safe abortion care within family planning programmes and comprehensive sexual and reproductive health and rights has been a recurring theme in the 2011 International Conference on Family Planning. Despite commitments from ICPD, CEDAW, UN Millennium Development Goals 5 and 5(b) and international women’s conferences, women around the world continue to suffer death and disability due to unsafe abortion. Approximately 22 million unsafe abortions take place globally, contributing to high rates of maternal mortality and morbidity. Each one of these deaths and disabilities is unacceptable and preventable.

Many of these tragic deaths and disabilities can be prevented with the provision of comprehensive, safe abortion care. Abortion care and family planning services are intertwined; they are integral components of comprehensive women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights. These services should be provided to all women irrespective of age, marital status, colour, ethnicity, religion, gender and sexual orientation, socio-economic status and where they live and work.

Young women account for almost half of the estimated unsafe abortion-related deaths. Changing demographics will result in a significantly larger proportion of the population being under 25 years of age. We need to take immediate action to save young women’s lives so they are able to achieve their true potential and assume rightful leadership in social and economic development.

To respect and fulfil women’s rights and facilitate all women’s access to comprehensive abortion care including family planning services, states are called to decriminalise abortion as per the Beijing Platform for Action and the recent statement to the UN General Assembly by the Special Rapporteur for Health of the UN Human Rights Council.

More political and financial commitment to comprehensive abortion care is required to ensure the fulfilment of goals set by the international community.
Abortion has been systematically neglected in many sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) strategies and programmes.

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Saving Lives

Up to half a million women and three million newborn babies die each year in pregnancy and childbirth or soon afterwards, the majority of them in Africa and South Asia. For every woman who dies at least twenty more suffer complications which leave them with lifelong disability and pain.

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