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US Government Rejoins Worldwide
Reproductive Health Consensus

Health and development groups applaud Clinton speech; call for action

NEW YORK, NY (8 January 2010) — The Population Council is joining a broad coalition of organizations representing millions of Americans who applaud today’s statement by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that the United States unequivocally supports the worldwide consensus that achieving universal access to reproductive health is critical for individual health, family well-being, broader economic development, and a healthy planet.

In a speech today at the State Department, Secretary Clinton declared the US government’s renewed support and dedication to meeting the health and development goals laid out in the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) and other related UN agreements, including the Millennium Development Goals.

The Secretary said, “Women’s health is essential to the prosperity and health of all people,” and that the United States has rejoined with all governments to “make the access to reproductive health care a basic right."

During the groundbreaking 1994 UN International Conference on Population and Development held in Cairo, 179 nations laid out an ambitious plan of action to improve health and achieve sustainable development by focusing on individual health needs and human rights, especially for women and girls.

Countries agreed to achieve universal access to reproductive health services by the year 2015, a target reaffirmed in the Millennium Development Goals. Reproductive health services include voluntary contraception that is affordable and safe, sex education programs to prevent unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV/AIDS, and programs that improve maternal and child health.

“The United States was a major architect of the 1994 Cairo agreement, but US funding for international family planning programs, a major component of reproductive health services, has fallen 23 percent in real dollars since its high in 1995,” said Suzanne Ehlers, interim president of Population Action International. “Today’s statement by Secretary Clinton marks a return to US leadership on international family planning.”

Investments in reproductive health programs have saved lives and delivered real results. In Mexico, the infant mortality rate fell by 70 percent between 1970 and 2005, as the use of modern contraceptives nearly doubled. Similar results have been seen in Bangladesh, Egypt, Thailand, and elsewhere.

Conversely, inadequate funding for reproductive health and family planning programs holds grave consequences for women and families. One woman dies needlessly in pregnancy or childbirth every minute of every day, and each year six million more suffer injury, illness, or disability. Each year, between 70 and 80 million unintended pregnancies occur in the developing world.

To meet the unmet need for family planning and achieve the goal of universal access to reproductive health care, the coalition of nonprofit organizations calls on the Obama Administration to:

  • Ensure that the new Global Health Initiative retains a strong focus on interventions to prevent unintended pregnancy, promote women’s health, and save women’s lives.
  • Ensure that greater access to contraception and reproductive health care remains a high priority within any restructuring of the US government’s foreign assistance program so that women, men, and youth can access a comprehensive range of reproductive health services no matter where they are accessing care.
  • Work with the US Congress to fund international family planning programs at $1 billion in order to reverse a decade of inadequate funding, and eliminate punitive legislative restrictions that continue to tie up the US contribution to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).

"Poll after poll has shown that a majority of Americans across the ideological divide support family planning programs and proven investments in women’s health," said Tamara Kreinin, executive director of women and population at the United Nations Foundation.

This statement was endorsed by:


About the Population Council
The Population Council confronts critical health and development issues—from stopping the spread of HIV to improving reproductive health and ensuring that young people lead full and productive lives. Through biomedical, social science, and public health research in 50 countries, we work with our partners to deliver solutions that lead to more effective policies, programs, and technologies that improve lives around the world. Established in 1952 and headquartered in New York, the Council is a nongovernmental, nonprofit organization governed by an international board of trustees.

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