World needs family planning access as population nears 7B
Birth control unavailable to 250 million women who seek it
By Laura Payton, CBC News
Posted: Oct 26, 2011 1:27 PM ET
Last Updated: Oct 26, 2011 3:57 PM ET
Sharouq, 19, left, Mona, 17, centre, and Hossam, 19, right, head to a concert in Cairo. The world's population is getting younger, and already unmet needs for family planning will increase along with the percentage of young people in the world, according to the UN Population Fund. (Guo Tieliu/UNFPA)
Related
The world needs better access to family planning services and contraception as it approaches seven billion inhabitants, a UN agency said Wednesday.
The United Nations Population Fund said in a new report that the world's population is expected to hit seven billion on Oct. 31, and too many people don't have the means to control their fertility.
"We must ensure that reproductive health services and family planning are better funded and that they become available to everyone who wants them," said Alanna Armitage, director of the UNFPA office in Geneva.
Canada, despite its $1.1-billion Muskoka initiative to fund maternal and child health, has so far only directed 1.7 per cent of that money to family planning, said Sandeep Prasad, executive director of Action Canada for Population and Development.
"There are 250 million women who want family planning globally and they're not getting it," he said. "This unmet need for contraception will grow by 40 per cent by 2050 with the largest generation of young people ever entering their reproductive years."
International Cooperation Minister Bev Oda said Wednesday morning that family planning is an integral part of Canada's Muskoka funding. "We believe that this initiative will actually help many, many women around the world," she said.
The UN agency is releasing a report that says it's time to plan for more growth so that young people are engaged and contributing to their communities, and the elderly are healthy and engaged.
Under-25s close to half of population
While people under 25 years old make up close to half — 43 per cent — of the world's population, life expectancy is climbing. The global average life expectancy in the 1950s was 48 years, climbing to 68 by the end of the last decade.
Infant mortality plunged from about 133 deaths in 1,000 births in the 1950s to 46 per 1,000 in the period from 2005 to 2010, the report says.
Women's fertility, meanwhile, has dropped from an average of six children to a more manageable 2.5, which the report chalks up to "countries’ economic growth and development but also because of a complex mix of social and cultural forces," including greater access by women to education, paid work and contraception.
But the world still adds an extra 80 million people to its population each year, about the same number of people who live in Germany or Ethiopia.
The report says reproductive health options are essential and must be built into countries' budgets.
UNFPA executive director Babatunde Osotimehin, former minister of health in Nigeria, refers in the report to a decision by the U.S. under Republican administrations to allow condom distribution in developing countries for HIV prevention, but not for family planning purposes. They can serve both purposes, so it makes little sense to compartmentalize them or to pay for them from separate budgets, he wrote.
Osotimehin says some governments have not always made family planning a priority and haven't honoured women's rights.
Sex education is also key, the report says.
Share Tools
House of Commons Liveblog: The CP Rail back-to-work bill (#C39) by Kady O'Malley May. 29, 2012 2:46 PM Debate kicks off this afternoon at 3pm and expected to last past midnight.
Top News Headlines
- Air Canada jet with falling debris had previous mishaps
- The airplane that had its engine shut down and was forced into an emergency landing Monday in Toronto has had two previous documented cases of mechanical damage since it started flying five years ago, according to Transport Canada. more »
- Canada has higher proportion of seniors than ever before
- New census data shows Canada now has a higher proportion of seniors than ever before -- a development that has crept up on society with far-reaching implications for health, finance, policy and everyday family relationships. more »
- RIM shares drop on warning of operating loss
- Shares in Research in Motion Inc. fell eight per cent in after hours trading Tuesday after it announced it would report an operating loss at its next earnings report on June 28. more »
- Alberta couple, child found dead in Saskatchewan ditch
- A married couple and a 2-year-old boy from Airdrie, Alta., have been found dead in a ditch near St. Walburg, Sask. more »
Latest Politics News Headlines
- Fisheries Act changes questioned by former ministers
- Four former federal fisheries ministers are questioning the government's motives behind the inclusion of environmental protection changes to the Fisheries Act in the Budget Implementation Act. more »
- Robocalls may need regulating, elections chief tells MPs
- Elections Canada may recommend regulating robocalls following 1,100 complaints from the last election, the Chief Electoral Officer told MPs today. He also said the agency is reviewing voter registration rules after results in a Toronto riding were thrown out. more »
- F-35 committee probe stalled, shutting down soon?
- Opposition MPs on the public accounts committee are accusing the government of having something to hide, based on a secret Conservative motion to stop hearing witnesses on the controversial F-35 fighter jet procurement. more »
- Social media websites ignoring privacy laws, watchdog says
- Canada's privacy commissioner said today she is concerned some social media companies are disregarding privacy laws, and called for the federal government to impose stronger penalties when they are breached. more »
The National
The House
- Qc students open the door to compromise May. 28, 2012 3:37 PM This week on The House, Evan Solomon explores the ongoing student protests in Quebec. The conflict that began as a disagreement between certain student associations and the provincial government over tuition hikes seems to have morphed into something larger. Evan talks to Leo Bureau-Blouin, the president of Quebec's College Student Federation, about the ongoing dispute. Then, Quebec's Finance Minister Raymond Bachand talks about what it will take to resolve the conflict, and if an election is the only solution.
- Possible human foot sent to Conservative Party HQ
- Richard Branson suggests naked kitesurfing to premier
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- Severe thunderstorms rock eastern Ontario
- Air Canada jet with falling debris had previous mishaps
- Canada has higher proportion of seniors than ever before
- Newly discovered malware most lethal cyberweapon to date
- Alberta couple, child found dead in Saskatchewan ditch

