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<div class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Vern Weitzel</b> <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:vern.weitzel@gmail.com">vern.weitzel@gmail.com</a>></span><br>crossposted from: "[health-vn discussion group]" <<a href="mailto:health-vn@anu.edu.au">health-vn@anu.edu.au</a>><br>
<br>From: UNNews <<a href="mailto:UNNews@un.org">UNNews@un.org</a>><br><br>UN AND WORLD BANK VOICE CONCERNS ABOUT FUNDING FOR FAMILY PLANNING<br>New York, Jul 1 2009 5:00PM<br>Family planning and other reproductive health services for women have fallen off<br>
the development radar of many poor countries, donors and aid agencies, according<br>to the United Nations and the World Bank, which are warning of the impact this<br>will have on already high maternal mortality rates.<br>
<br>New preliminary figures from the <"<a href="http://www.worldbank.org/" target="_blank">http://www.worldbank.org/</a>">World Bank show<br>that official global development aid for health increased from $2.9 billion in<br>
1995 to $14.1 billion in 2007, or roughly a five-fold increase in 12 years.<br><br>During the same period, aid for population and reproductive health made a more<br>modest increase from $901 million to $1.9 billion.<br><br>
The global economic crisis has compounded the lack of funding for such<br>programmes, thereby jeopardizing the achievement of the Millennium Development<br>Goal (MDG) for maternal health, which is already lagging behind.<br>
<br>“With the financial crisis and the reduction in budgets for health, this goal<br>will be even harder to realize,” Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director of the<br>UN Population Fund (<"<a href="http://www.unfpa.org/public/News/pid/3008" target="_blank">http://www.unfpa.org/public/News/pid/3008</a>">UNFPA), said at<br>
a meeting at the World Bank, ahead of this year’s World Population Day, observed<br>on 11 July.<br><br>“It is not a lack of knowledge that is hindering progress; it is a lack of<br>political will to protect the health and rights of women,” she stated.<br>
<br>UNFPA estimates that more than 500,000 women die each year during pregnancy and<br>childbirth from mostly preventable and treatable medical problems. For every<br>woman who dies, another 20 women suffer injuries and disabilities that can last<br>
a lifetime.<br><br>Africa has the world’s highest rates of maternal mortality – at least 100 times<br>those in developed countries, the agency adds.<br><br>Joy Phumaphi, Vice President for Human Development at the World Bank, said the<br>
global economic downturn has become a development emergency for women because<br>they are among the first to suffer when crises strike. But the troubles did not<br>start with the onset of the financial crisis.<br><br>“Even before this crisis began, family planning and reproductive health had<br>
fallen off the radar of low-income countries, aid donors, and development<br>agencies — with the result that we’ve lost precious time in helping women get<br>access to these vital health services, and helping countries get on a faster<br>
track to reducing poverty,” she stated.<br>________________<br><br>For more details go to UN News Centre at <a href="http://www.un.org/news" target="_blank">http://www.un.org/news</a><br></div>