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Investing in youth: the role of reproductive health Printable Version PRINTABLE VERSION
by International Youth Development Forum IYDF, Nigeria Sep 9, 2002
Health , Child & Youth Rights   Opinions

  

85-115 million girls and women have undergone FGM. Two million or more girls undergo FGM each year. FGM is most often practiced in 26 African countries (including the Middle East), a few Asian countries, and is increasingly practiced in Europe, Canada, Australia and the US.

BARRIERS TO GOOD HEALTH
Why do young people disproportionately suffer from reproductive health problems?

Lack of Information:
Many young people lack knowledge and have misleading information about sexual issues.

Lack of Access:
Legal barriers often prohibit or limit provision of information or services to young people. Financial and geographic barriers prevent many young people from paying for services or being able to access clinics.

Cultural and Social Restrictions:
Unequal power relations and sexual coercion between boys and girls and older men and girls often prevent girls from negotiating the timing of sex and contraceptive usage. Attitudes toward sex, particularly premarital sex, often result in the restriction of information and access to services for young people. Low levels of female education lead to less reproductive decision-making power and earlier childbearing among many young women.


RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ACTION:
SOCIAL & ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES

Ensuring young people's reproductive health is not solely the responsibility of the health sector, but also that of the education, poverty, and population sectors.

Young People's Health is a Population Issue:
Young people represent a large and growing population group.
Associated with the demographic transition is an absolute and relative increase in the population of older people. Investments in the human capital of youth are necessary to build a healthy workforce that can support and ensure the welfare of the elderly population.

Young People's Health is an Education Issue:
The health of young people has a direct impact on their educational potentials. Schoolgirls who become pregnant are either forced to leave school, risk unsafe abortions to avoid leaving school, and are prevented from returning to school after giving birth, because they have to take care of their child. Young women who become pregnant at an early age, therefore, achieve lower levels of education than women who delay childbearing until their 20s. "Investing in the second decade of life should be part of regular business at each level of the development community." This was the message delivered by the Population Council in a World Bank workshop on adolescent health. Neglecting young people's health will reduce or negate the benefits of past government expenditures in child survival, childhood communicable diseases, and education as well as curtail future economic and social development.

Despite their fundamental importance, programs and policies for young people remain lacking. The needs of young people are often only recognized when it is too late: when they become pregnant, need abortions, or are infected with HIV or other STDS. Services — if provided — are delivered through conventional Maternal Child Health/Family Planning (MCH/FP) programs which are not specifically geared toward younger age groups.


It is time to end the cultural and policy silence surrounding young people's health and prevent young women and men's problems before they start. Young people comprise almost 30% of the world population, and are growing in number. By 2020, 87% of young people will be living in developing countries. A large percentage of these young people will be sexually active, not use adequate contraception, and suffer disproportionately from reproductive health problems including pregnancy-related complications, HIV/AIDS and STDS, and female genital mutilation (FGM).

Ensuring the reproductive health of young people makes social and economic sense: Health complications related to STDS, abortion, or teenage pregnancy can place a substantial burden on individual welfare and scarce government resources. Adolescent childbearing can lead to economic setbacks for young people, their communities, and the national economy. If adequate public investments are not made in the health of the younger generation, these personal and societal costs will only increase.

Young People's Health is a Poverty Issue:
Improving young people's health is critical to the goal of poverty reduction: Young people comprise an increasing percentage of the workforce, are the workforce of the future, and contribute to the economic production in the home through paid and unpaid work.
Obstructed labor, HIV infection, and chlamydia infection rank among the leading ten causes of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost among young people ages 10-24 living in developing regions

Future Directions:
ln planning future health, population, education, and poverty projects, Bank staff must recognize that:
ways of shaping investments in young people's health should be discussed within and among sectors; opportunities for collaboration must be created among Bank projects; on a country level, health programs for youth should be integrated and mainstreamed with other national plans.







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Jerry Welch | Sep 8th, 2003
No one "needs" an abortion. And you wonder why sexual diseases spread. The removal of the premarital sex taboo has cost more lives and health than can be recovered.

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