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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category sexual and reproductive health.
  • The Missing Link: Stillbirth & Self-Care

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  September 28, 2022  //  By Elizabeth O'Donnell
    Mixed,Ethnicity,Family,Couple,Holding,Hands,On,Table,,Black,Man

    For many people, stillbirth— the occurrence of a fetal death at 20+ week’s gestation—is a concept. A statistic. Each year, at least 23,000 stillbirths occur in the United States. It occurs in one out of every 160 pregnancies. Yet when these numbers become a reality in your own life, they take on a new meaning.

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  • Decolonising Sex Education

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  September 21, 2022  //  By Susie Jolly
    Untitled design

    We should be outraged by sexuality education’s colonialist connections. As a researcher and trainer based in the UK, I see how deeply blatant colonialist influences run in the field of sex education. The British empire was obsessed with the sexualities of their subjects and imagined their societies to be exotic licentious places where upper class British men could live out illicit fantasies. Yet, at the same time, these societies were deemed to be wells of immorality that needed Victorian moral education. These dual imaginaries were used to justify colonialism itself as a force to civilize non-western bodies and sexualities, and remain as ideas which echo in more contemporary discourses around controlling population and HIV.

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  • Sharing Stories: Prioritizing Sexual and Reproductive Health in Universal Health Coverage

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  September 7, 2022  //  By Alyssa Kumler

    BHO (Basic Health Unit), Dogran Kalan Union Counsil, Wagah, Punjab Province, Pakistan:::  Client: Tahira Rashid.  Dr. Fauzia Amin FMO (Female Medical Officer)

    “Globally women and girls continue to face barriers to access healthcare services—whether it be transport costs, financial costs, or even language barriers,” said Shakira Choonara, Technical Specialist with the World Health Organization (WHO) at a recent launch event of the Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC) Learning by Sharing Portal (LSP).

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  • Moving in Opposite Directions: Abortion Rights in Latin America and the United States

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    Dot-Mom  //  August 31, 2022  //  By Beatriz García Nice
    Puebla,,Mexico,-,March,7,,2021:,On,The,Way,To

    In its June 2022 decision, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the U.S. Supreme Court abandoned decades of precedent to strike down the constitutional right to abortion. This ruling—and a shift in regulatory power over abortion to individual states—is having a profound impact in American society. Already, a record number of abortion measures are on ballots to protect or abolish abortion rights. In many states, the fight over abortion access continues to take place in courtrooms. Far from settling the matter, the Supreme Court’s ruling showcases the deep divide over abortion in American society.

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  • New Global Health & Gender Policy Brief: Global Fertility Rates and the Role of Infertility

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  August 3, 2022  //  By Maternal Health Initiative Staff
    Close,Up,Of,Young,Woman,Hold,In,Hands,Positive,Or

    While the world’s population now approaches 8 billion people, global fertility rates have been declining for decades. The overall drivers of this decline include increased access to contraception and reproductive health care, an increase in women seeking higher education, women’s empowerment in the workforce, lower rates of child mortality globally, increased cost of raising children, and overall greater gender equality.

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  • How Gender Inequality Drives the Global Crisis of Unintended Pregnancy

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 27, 2022  //  By Alyssa Kumler
    agency_0

    “Half. This is the proportion of all pregnancies that are unintended. That is 121 million pregnancies every year,” said Sarah Craven, Director of the Washington D.C. Office at UNFPA during a recent U.S. launch event for the 2022 UNFPA State of World Population (SWOP) report. “For these women, the most life altering reproductive choice, whether to become pregnant or not, is no choice at all. This is an unseen crisis unfolding right before our eyes.”

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  • Cascading Impacts of the War in Ukraine: Mental, Maternal, and Newborn Health

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  July 20, 2022  //  By Sarah B. Barnes

    FILE - Medical workers hold newborn Alana close to her mother after a cesarean section at a hospital in Mariupol, Ukraine, March 11, 2022. Alana's mother had to be evacuated from another maternity hospital that was bombed by Russian forces and lost some of her toes. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka, File)

    This article was originally published as part of the summer 2022 issue of the Wilson Quarterly: Ripples of War.

    Ukraine and its people will feel the effects of the Russian invasion for years to come. More than 6 million refugees have left Ukraine, another 8 million Ukrainians are internally displaced. Among those most impacted are Ukraine’s women and girls, who have a greater chance of experiencing gender-based violence, exploitation, and trafficking. They also face escalated maternal and newborn mortality rates stemming from lack of services and diminished care, as well as injuries and trauma due to the ongoing conflict. Less visibly, Ukrainians are confronting severe emotional distress and trauma.

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  • Midwives in Humanitarian Crises Need Recognition and Investment

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  July 13, 2022  //  By Alyssa Kumler
    Cox's,Bazar,,Bangladesh:,October,14,,2017-,Medicare,Midwives,Make,Pregnant

    More than 60 percent of preventable maternal deaths and 45 percent of newborn deaths take place in countries affected by recent conflict, natural disaster, or both. Yet as Sarah B. Barnes, Project Director of the Maternal Health Initiative, observed at a recent event hosted by the Wilson Center and UNFPA, in collaboration with the Inter-agency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crisis (IAWG) and White Ribbon Alliance, “the leading causes of both maternal and newborn death occurring in humanitarian settings are considered to be preventable if managed by skilled providers and adequate resources.”

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