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FM
Former Member

UN agency wants safe, effective family planning in the Caribbean

Jul 13, 2017 News, http://www.kaieteurnewsonline....ng-in-the-caribbean/

UNITED NATIONS (CMC) – The United Nations population agency has called for the safe, effective family planning in the Caribbean and other developing countries, saying that it is key to empowering people.

The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) said on the occasion of World Population Day –marked annually on July 11 – that if the demand of women in developing countries who wanted access to safe and effective family planning was met, it would reduce an estimated 100,000 maternal death and avert 67 million unintended pregnancies.

“Some 214 million women in developing countries who want to avoid pregnancy are not using safe and effective family planning methods, for reasons ranging from lack of access to information or services to lack of support from their partners or communities,” UNFPA said.

This year’s occurrence coincides with the Family Planning Summit, the second meeting of the FP2020-Family Planning 2020-initiative, which aims to expand access to voluntary family planning to 120 million additional women by 2020.

Natalia Kanem, UNFPA Acting Executive Director, noted that better reproductive health care – including voluntary family planning – could bolster economies and contribute to sustainable development by empowering women to complete school and join the labour force. There, she would be likely to earn a higher income and increase her and her family’s savings and investment.

In addition, for each additional dollar spent on contraceptive services above the current level, the cost of pregnancy-related care is reduced by US$2.30, according to UNFPA figures.

“Investments in family planning help lead to prosperity for all,” Kanem said, highlighting this year’s theme for the 2017 Day, “Family Planning: Empowering People, Developing Nations.”

She added that safe and effective family planning also contribute to the success of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, particularly the corresponding goals of ending poverty, ending hunger, promoting good health, and aiming for gender equality.

In her message, Kanem urged all governments and stakeholders to help the UN agency achieve its goal of meeting unmet demand for family planning by 2030.

On behalf of UNFPA, she also called on the 179 member countries that endorsed the Programme of Action of the 1994 Cairo International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) to fulfill their commitments to achieve universal access to sexual and reproductive health, including voluntary family planning. “Not only is this a matter of protecting health and rights, but it is also a matter of investing in economic development as well as humanity’s prosperity and progress,” Kanem said.

At the summit, co-hosted by UNFPA and the United Kingdom Government, UN Deputy-Secretary-General Amina Mohammed urged different sectors and actors to work together by pooling resources, knowledge and expertise.

“We need inclusive global, regional, national and local partnerships between governments, the private sector and civil society, built on shared principles and values,” she said. Mohammed pointed to the need for continued support of civil society and faith-based organizations, as well as strategic partnerships with the private sector.

“These partnerships will ultimately benefit businesses themselves, through healthier, better-educated and more committed workforces and communities,” she said.

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UN agency wants safe, effective family planning in the Caribbean

Jul 13, 2017 News, http://www.kaieteurnewsonline....ng-in-the-caribbean/

UNITED NATIONS (CMC) – The United Nations population agency has called for the safe, effective family planning in the Caribbean and other developing countries, saying that it is key to empowering people.

The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) said on the occasion of World Population Day –marked annually on July 11 – that if the demand of women in developing countries who wanted access to safe and effective family planning was met, it would reduce an estimated 100,000 maternal death and avert 67 million unintended pregnancies.

While indeed improved and effective family planning is important, it begs the question whether UNFPA's numbers are accurate or they are simply "throwing out numbers and guesses" on their views on the matter.

FM

In fact Caribbean birth rates aren't high, and when combined with high rates of emigration most countries aren't seeing significant population growth.  The exceptions being islands where lost souls of Guyanese, Jamaicans and others flee to as they cannot remain at home.

I will suggest that the declining performance of Caribbean boys in the educational system is of greater importance.  The result is that increasing numbers are unemployable and easy recruits for the criminal world. 

The educational system in the Caribbean is still oriented to the 10-20% (30% in the case of Barbados) who will move on to college.  It should also prepare non college oriented people with the hard and soft skills that they need to succeed.

The sad thing is that even at the "Common Entrance" level gender disparities are now becoming apparent. The Caribbean will soon have de facto single sex high schools, even as these are all supposedly coed.

FM
caribny posted:

The educational system in the Caribbean is still oriented to the 10-20% (30% in the case of Barbados) who will move on to college.  It should also prepare non college oriented people with the hard and soft skills that they need to succeed.

While indeed a large number of individuals proceed for university studies, emphasis must be placed on effective courses, training and placement of individuals who will immediately enter the workforce.

FM

It begs the question why this burden left mainly on women shoulders when men/fathers should advise their spouses to take preventive measures to avoid unwanted pregnancy? Men should be involved in family planning along with their spouses, and if this was done the way it was supposed to, the decreased of unwanted pregnancies and material deaths would score more accurately than what the UNFPA has estimated. 

FM
Demerara_Guy posted:
caribny posted:

The educational system in the Caribbean is still oriented to the 10-20% (30% in the case of Barbados) who will move on to college.  It should also prepare non college oriented people with the hard and soft skills that they need to succeed.

While indeed a large number of individuals proceed for university studies, emphasis must be placed on effective courses, training and placement of individuals who will immediately enter the workforce.

Agreed.  Throughout the Caribbean employers complain that employees lack the hard or soft skills to become trainable.  They lack leadership or problem solving skills, lack initiative and their literacy and numeracy skills are quite poor.

In fact only 11% of the population had post secondary education in 2012, and even Regions 4 and 10 had only 15%, this putting Guyana at the lower end in the Caribbean, even though some islands lack tertiary level institution.

Our educational system ignores almost 90% of the population and in fact 25% hadn't even completed primary school, with this number reaching 33% in Berbice and the Essequibo coast.

FM

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