The World Health Organization estimates that 123 million women worldwide want to limit the number of children they have but are not using contraceptives. Stock Photo |
Poor fall behind in birth controlContraception gap widens in richer countriesFebruary 8, 2007By William J. Cromie
Modern contraception has come a long way in the past 20 years, what with diaphragms, hormones, implants, intrauterine devices, condoms, spermicides, and sterilization. But the boom in birth control has been a bust for the poorest women in the world. According to a study by researchers at Harvard University and the World Health Organization, international efforts to make pregnancy control a human right are bypassing people who live on a few dollars a day in developing nations from Bangladesh to Zimbabwe. "Widespread increase in the use of contraception is one of the most dramatic social transformations of the second half of the 20th century," notes Emmanuela Gakidou of the Harvard Initiative for Global Health. She and Effy Vayena of the World Health Organization in Geneva decided to determine if this contraceptive revolution includes the poorest women on Earth. The short answer is "no." Gakidou and Vayena analyzed surveys done between 1985 and 2003 in 55 developing nations in Latin America, Southeast Asia, and Africa. Information was collected on the wealth and contraception use of married, divorced, and widowed women ranging in age from 15 to 49 years. The World Health Organization estimates that 123 million women worldwide want to limit the number of children they have but are not using contraceptives. During the 18-year period of the surveys, levels of health services, average wealth, education, and rates of contraceptive use all increased globally. But the poorest benefited the least. As developing nations thrive, the gap between average and poor has widened as far as controlling births is concerned. Women in middle or sub-Saharan Africa fare the worst as far as availability of health services that deal with birth control. South and Southeast Asia boast a higher relative use of modern contraceptives, although absolute use among the poor is low. In Latin America, contraceptive use is higher than in Africa, but the gap between use by poor versus average women is higher than in Asia. Richer countries in the survey, such as Brazil, boast greater use of contraceptives. In these nations, however, the gap in services between rich and poor is greatest. |