This Document Contains Text Automatically Extracted From A PDF or Image File. Formatting May Have Been Lost and Not All Text May Have Been Recognized
This Document Contains Text Automatically Extracted From A PDF or Image File. Formatting May Have Been Lost and Not All Text May Have Been Recognized
This Document Contains Text Automatically Extracted From A PDF or Image File. Formatting May Have Been Lost and Not All Text May Have Been Recognized
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090:
Family planning saves lives and improves
health
Women's health. Contraceptive use reduces maternal mortality
and improves women's health by preventing unwanted and
high-risk pregnancies and reducing the need for unsafe abortions.
Some contraceptives also improve women's health by reducing the
likelihood of disease transmission and protecting against certain
cancers and health problems (see box, page 5).
"It is estimated that 100,000 maternal deaths could be avoided each
year if all women who said they want no more children were able to
stop childbearing."
Each year over 500,000 women die from causes related to
pregnancy and childbirth (Maternal Mortality Ratios and Rates,
WHO, 1991). The most common causes of maternal death are
complications of pregnancy and delivery such as haemorrhage,1
sepsis,1 complications of unsafe abortion, hypertensive disorders
of pregnancy,1 and obstructed labour1 (Mother-Baby Package, WHO,
1994). In much of South Asia, a woman has a one in 35 chance of
dying over the course of her lifetime as a consequence of unsafe
abortion, pregnancy, or delivery; in many areas of Africa the risk
is greater than one in 20 (Maternal Mortality Ratios and Rates, WHO,
1991). By contrast, the risk in North America is one in 4,006
(Maternal Mortality Ratios and Rates, WHO, 1991). Pregnancy also
affects women's health: for each maternal death in a developing
country, more than 100 women suffer illnesses related to
pregnancy and childbirth (Koblinsky, 1993). A significant
proportion of these deaths could be avoided through the effective
use of family planning; it is estimated that 100,000 maternal deaths
could be avoided each year if all women who said they wanted no
more children were able to stop childbearing (World Bank, 1993).
1See glossary.
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Figure 1:
Current use -
Unmet need
O 20
100
The unmet need for family planning èncludes all currenzky married women aged 15-49 who einher do
not wan! a child in the next 2 years, do not want any more children at all, or racemiy had a
contraceptive method faìiure bur who are nm curramëy using a contraceptive method.
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