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Choices on sex and pregnancy

Girls Decide: choices on sex and pregnancy

Projects for girls and young women that offer great potential for making a difference on a large scale.

These projects can guide policy- and decision-makers, educators, service providers and community leaders in re-thinking strategies for girls and young women.

Girls Decide: Putting girls’ sexual and reproductive health at the heart of development

15 February 2010

 

There is a growing global consensus that girls are central to global development. Yet issues relating to girls’ sexuality and their sexual and reproductive rights continue to be largely neglected. 

 

Girls Decide, a new initiative from the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), highlights the importance of girls’ and young women’s sexual and reproductive lives for both individual and global development, and aims to ensure governments around the world to adopt policies that work for girls.

 

Complications related to pregnancy and childbirth, including unsafe abortion, are the most common causes of death among adolescent girls. The Girls Decide initiative aims to reduce the risks related to girls’ pregnancy and to improve the health, well-being and development of girls and young women worldwide. Ensuring girls’ and young women have access to life-saving and life-enhancing SRH services and information is a human rights imperative and essential to tackle gender inequality and ill-health.

 

Girls Decide launches this week with six short films that share the stories of six girls from around the world and their journeys to make informed decisions about sex, pregnancy, abortion and relationships.

 

The initiative will be launched at an event in London attended by UK Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for International Development, Stephen O’Brien, MP.

 

Stephen O’Brien, Minister for International Development, said: "One thousand women die everyday in pregnancy or childbirth. They die not from incurable disease or chronic illness but from conditions and complications that we have the power to prevent.

 

"That is why the Coalition Government has put women and girls at the heart of our development plans. Our plans will double the number of lives saved in pregnancy and childbirth in the world’s poorest countries by 2015.

 

"We will train more midwives to ensure women give birth safely, provide access to quality healthcare and make contraception more readily available to help unintended pregnancies.

 

"Empowering adolescent girls so they can make healthy choices is at the centre of Britain’s development work and we join with the IPPF in urging others to do the same - today."

 

Gill Greer, Director General of IPPF, said: “The world needs to do more for girls and young women. Girls and young women are powerful agents of change and pivotal for the development of communities and nations. However, around the world, girls are most affected by inequity and poverty. This is clearly seen in the neglected areas of girls’ sexuality and their sexual and reproductive rights. Withholding girls’ and young women’s right to decide and the means to act upon those decisions perpetuates inequality and ill-health”




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