Women failed to benefit from progress made in sexual, reproductive health: report

2 mins read

ISLAMABAD: As the world has made strides in sexual and reproductive health and rights over the last 30 years, the number of women who cannot benefit from this is still in millions.

These observations were made on Tuesday when UNFPA launched the annual report on the State of the World Population 2024 under the theme `Interwoven Lives, Threads of Hope: Ending Inequalities in sexual and reproductive health and rights`. It said the way forward was only through an inclusive future. The numbers and statistics delineated how discrimination continued to block broad gains in sexual and reproductive health for women and girls in many parts of the world.

The report sent a wake-up call for understanding that so many were at risk due to structural inequalities around the world with over half of all preventable maternal deaths estimated to occur in countries with humanitarian crises and conflicts that was nearly 500 deaths per day.

The year 2024, marked the thirtieth anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo a landmark moment in which 179 governments committed to placing sexual and reproductive health and rights at the core of sustainable development. But progress was in danger, it was observed.

The report highlighted that millions of women and girls remained far behind, and progress was slowing or stalled on key measures. As many as 800 women died every day giving birth, unchanged since 2016, and nearly one in ten women could not make their own decisions about contraception. In Pakistan, less than one in three women could make decisions regarding sexual and reproductive health. Women with disabilities were up to 10 times more likely to experience gender-based violence than their peers without disabilities.

`Pakistan is a country with a predominantly young population. Every young person must be given the chance to achieve their potential. With over 50 percent of Pakistan’s population under the age of 19, the country will miss a great opportunity and face high risks if youth are not enabled to exercise their rights in good health, education, and well-being. Women and girls are another missed opportunity for Pakistan’s economy and social fabric. This fact speaks to the Endings of the SWOP report, which highlighted that due to structural inequalities, most women still do not have access to healthcare facilities,` said Dr Luay Shabaneh, UNFPA Representative at the media launch of there port in Pakistan.

Pockets of inequality persist: The evidence outlined in the report pointed to a troubling reality access to contraceptives, safe birth services, respectful maternity care, and other essential sexual and reproductive health services was unreachable for too many women and girls. The Universal Health Coverage (UHC) remained dishearteningly low at only 21 percent in Pakistan.

According to the report every 50 minutes a woman died due to pregnancy complications in Pakistan. Women in rural areas were less likely to get timely healthcare while sadly progress was slow in Pakistan. If this pace continued, Pakistan was likely to achieve zero maternal deaths after 122 years and fulfil the needs for family planning after 93 years.

Acknowledgement: Published in Dawn News on 8th May 2024.

Previous Story

Constable booked for allegedly raping wife’s niece

Next Story

Bus service for female teachers, students to be started in capital

Latest from Blog

Schools Violating Vacation Orders Penalised

SWABI: Complaints pouring in from different circles have forced the officials of the district administration to take action against schools who failed to comply with the provincial government’s order of summer holidays. The provincial education department has closed both public and private sector schools for summer holidays on June 15,…

Three Booked For Rape Of Ninth-grader

SAHIWAL: Police have registered a case against three suspects and arrested two of them for allegedly molesting and blackmailing a 15-year-old ninth-grade student through a mobile phone video in the official quarters of the irrigation department in Neeli Bar Canal Colony. Reports said ‘S’ of Sarwar Shaheed Road, Civil Lines,…

Three Pakistani Schools Among Top 10 Finalists For World’s Best School Prizes

ISLAMABAD: Three Pakistani schools have been named among the Top 10 finalists for the World’s Best School Prizes 2025. The prizes, launched by T4 Education in 2022 following the COVID-19 pandemic, aim to highlight innovative practices in schools that are transforming lives both inside and outside the classroom, according to…

Three Missing Hindu Girls Recovered From Karachi

Three underage Hindu girls who had mysteriously gone missing from Shahdadpur recently have been recovered from Karachi. Officials said on Thursday that Dr Lal Chand Ukrani, special assistant to the chief minister of Sindh on minority affairs, had taken serious notice of the incident and directed law enforcement agencies to…

STBB Committee Calls For Creativity And Tolerance In School Curricula

Hyderabad: The Sindh Textbook Board (STBB) reviewed committee has emphasised the inclusion of critical thinking, creativity and tolerance in school curricula. Officials said on 18-June-2025 that on the directives of Sindh Minister for Education Syed Sardar Ali Shah, the first meeting of the curriculum review committee formed by the Sindh…
Go toTop