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UN report points to yawning gap of inequality in sexual and reproductive health worldwide

A NEW study says an African woman is roughly 130 times more likely to die from pregnancy and childbirth complications than a woman in Europe or North America, the United Nations’ population fund UNFPA reported today.

UNFPA’s latest “State of world population” report also estimates that nearly 500 maternal deaths per day occur in countries with humanitarian crises or conflicts, and reveals that women of African descent in the Americas are more likely to die giving birth than white women.

“Sweeping global gains in sexual and reproductive health and rights over the last 30 years are marred by an ugly truth — millions of women and girls have not benefited because of who they are or where they were born,” UNFPA said in a statement.

UNFPA executive director Dr Natalia Kanem said the unintended pregnancy rate has declined by nearly a fifth since 1990 and the maternal death rate has dropped by more than a third since 2000.

But “inequalities within our societies and health systems are widening, and we have not adequately prioritised reaching those furthest behind,” she said.

Improvements in healthcare access have mostly benefited wealthier women and members of ethnic groups with better access to care, the fund said.

Dr Kanem hailed some progress: More than 160 countries have passed laws against domestic violence, and “legislation against LGBTQIA+ sexuality” that was once widespread has been on the retreat. Now only one-third of countries have such laws.

While she credited “the world’s agreement” that led to such gains, Dr Kanem also warned: “Human reproduction is being politicised. The rights of women, girls and gender-diverse people are the subject of increasing pushback.”

“Today, that progress is slowing. By many measures, it has stalled completely,” she said.

“Annual reductions in maternal deaths have flatlined. Since 2016, the world made zero progress in saving women from preventable deaths in pregnancy and childbirth.”

“Health systems today are weak,” Dr Kanem added.

“They’re tainted by gender inequality, by racial discrimination and by misinformation.”

The fund called for new investment in sexual and reproductive health, as well as improvements in sexuality education, stopping gender-based violence and “ending unmet need for contraception” — an issue that has driven division in some countries.

Under the term of US president Donald Trump, the United States halted funding for UNFPA, largely over concerns about abortion — depriving the fund of tens of millions of dollars over four years.

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