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Sexual Health - The
Integral Part of Reproductive Health
Sexual health was generally
understood to be an integral part of reproductive health,
and was dealt with as such in health programmes...
Date : January 16, 2006
Sexual health was generally
understood to be an integral part of reproductive health,
and was dealt with as such in health programmes. However,
the emergence of the pandemic of HIV (human immunodeciency
virus) infection, mounting rates of sexually
transmitted infections, and growing recognition of the
public health importance of concerns, such as gender-related
violence and sexual dysfunction have highlighted the need
to focus more explicitly on issues related to sexuality and
their implications for health and well-being. In response
to this, the WHO Department of Reproductive Health and Research
has started to look at sexual health as a different area of
work in its own right.
The goal of this new, cross-cutting activity is to provide
optimal sexual health and an affirmative view of sexuality
for women, men and young people. The specific objectives are:
-
To build the evidence base for high
quality, non-discriminatory, acceptable and sustainable
sexual health education and service programmes; and
-
To increase knowledge and understanding
of the social and cultural factors related to harmful
sexual practices in order to develop strategies to abolish
these practices.
Reasons for Poor Sexual
Health
Unintended Pregnancies:-
Enabling women to choose the number and timing of their births
through access to contraception is a fundamental component
of reproductive health services. Despite the nearly universal
commitment of the world's countries to this issue, nearly
30% of the 205 million pregnancies that occur each year are
unintended.
Reproductive Age:- As the number of women
in the reproductive ages (15-49) has reached an all time high,
families planning services and contraceptive supplies have
not kept pace. While the number of couples in low-income countries
using family planning services has increased dramatically
in the last decade, more than 120 million women who wish to
space or delay their next birth still do not have access to
modern methods of contraception.
Abortions:- Each year, some 30 million women
experience miscarriage and an additional 43 million end their
pregnancies through elective abortions. Nearly half of these
abortions occur in insecure and clandestine conditions where
abortion is illegal or highly restricted.
The Problem/Complicacies
The failure to provide women
with the means to prevent unintended pregnancies creates an
extraordinary and avoidable public health threat that results
in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of women. From 1995-2000,
nearly 700,000 women died from causes related to unintended
pregnancies.
While more than one-third died from problems associated with
pregnancy, labor and delivery, the majority - more than 400,000
- died as a result of complications resulting from unsafe
abortions. Many hundreds of thousands more survived after
hospitalization for complications of unsafe abortion.
Such life-threatening and preventable conditions also consume
a vast proportion of health resources in poor countries. Some
African hospitals report that one-third of gynecological expenditures
are used to treat complications of unsafe abortion. Universal
access to safe and effective contraception not only saves
lives but also conserves health resources for use in providing
improved obstetrical care.
Core aspects of reproductive
and sexual health services
The five core aspects of reproductive
and sexual health are: improving antenatal, perinatal, postpartum
and newborn care; providing high-quality services for family
planning, including infertility
services; eliminating unsafe abortion; combating sexually
transmitted infections including HIV, reproductive tract infections,
cervical cancer and other gynecological
concerns; and promoting sexual health. Because of the
close links between the different aspects of reproductive
and sexual health, interventions in one area are likely to
have a positive impact on the others. It is critical for countries
to strengthen existing services and use them as entry points
for new interventions, looking for maximum synergy.... In
most countries, the major entry point will be antenatal, childbirth
and postpartum services, which form the backbone of primary
health care.
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