Every Woman’s Right
(How family planning saves children’s lives)
| Autore/Curatore | Save The Children |
| Organizzazione | Save the Children |
| Data Uscita | 2012 |
| Pagine | 41 |
| Lingua | Inglese |
| Links | approfondisci... |
"Il diritto di ogni donna: come la pianificazione familiare salva la vita dei bambini" spiega perché fornire la contraccezione è vitale per sostenere e accelerare i progressi nel ridurre le morti di neonati, bambini e madri:
- Garantendo che le donne siano in grado di consentire un sano intervallo fra le nascite, i neonati e i bambini piccoli hanno maggiori probabilità di sopravvivere.
- Ritardare la prima gravidanza fino a quando le ragazze sono fisicamente pronte può salvare la vita sia delle ragazze adolescenti che dei loro neonati.
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Improving access to contraception would give more couples the power to decide whether or when to have a child. It’s also vital to improving children’s chances of survival. Around the world, more than 200 million women who do not wish to become pregnant are currently unable to access or use contraception.
Every Woman’s Right: How family planning saves children’s lives sets out why providing contraception is vital to sustaining and accelerating progress in reducing the deaths of babies, children and mothers:
- Ensuring women are able to allow a healthy space between births means babies and young children are more likely to survive.
- Delaying the first pregnancy until a girl is physically ready can save the lives of both adolescent girls and their newborn babies.
www.savethechildren.org.uk
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Indice
The story in numbers
Introduction and overview
How family planning helps save children’s lives
The global unmet need for family planning
A golden opportunity
Overview of this report
1 Time and space: how healthy timing and spacing of pregnancy saves lives
Birth spacing
Adolescent girls and family planning
2 Improving the supply of family planning services
Reaching the hardest to reach
The supply of contraceptive commodities
The role of health workers in providing family planning
The funding gap for family planning services
Family planning: who pays?
National Family Planning policies
The way forward
Recommendations
3 Stimulating demand for family planning through empowering women
Education
Social equality: policy and practice
Empowering women by supporting them in the workplace
Boosting demand
Recommendations
Conclusion
Five-point plan for the 2012 London Summit on Family Planning
Endnotes







