Family planning critical to Kenya’s development

NAIROBI: Two months ago, world leaders met at the United Nations headquarters and adopted ambitious goals that have the potential to advance health and human progress faster than at any time.

 

Now, we must begin the hard work of translating these Sustainable Development Goals into action. Women will be a driving force behind this global push, and their rights and well-being must be our top priority.

Ensuring every woman has the information and services she needs to decide when and how many children to have is a critical first step. We have seen the gains for women, families and communities when there is equitable access to voluntary family planning and contraceptive services, and the devastating effects when there is not.

The benefits of family planning go beyond the individual. Access to a full range of contraceptive options will significantly reduce maternal and infant deaths and improve the health of families. Allowing young women to plan whether and when they want to start their families gives them the option to stay in school, join the workforce or pursue other dreams.

This virtuous cycle that begins with empowering one woman can lift entire communities out of poverty. There is compelling evidence that increasing the number of healthy, educated and productive women will shift the economic well-being of countries like Kenya. This shift will only occur if countries pair their economic and social policies with strong voluntary family planning programmes.

To support efforts under way to bring these benefits to all communities, the global community pledged at the 2012 London Summit on Family Planning to ensure 120 million additional women and girls in poor countries get access to voluntary family planning by the year 2020. Earlier this month, FP2020 partners released a report on the progress we have made against the 2020 goal. The report shows that family planning programmes are reaching more women than before. Since 2012, 24.4 million additional women have been using modern contraceptives; an additional 746,000 in Kenya alone. In the past year, access to modern contraceptives has prevented 4,000 maternal deaths in Kenya.

While successes like these should be applauded, it is no time to be complacent. Data shows we are falling behind and that millions of women are not being reached; we must act with greater urgency.

We have a wealth of high-quality data and evidence on effective interventions, such as investing in youth, particularly adolescent girls, expanding access in both rural and urban settings, and improving the quality of services and number of contraceptive options that women have available to them. These solutions provide a strong base to inform our efforts. In order to reach more women and girls, we can look to innovative programmes like those in Kenya.

Kenya has scaled up its family planning voucher system that provides reproductive health services in five rural and urban districts. This significantly reduces out-of-pocket costs for family planning services for low-income women, freeing up resources to buy food for their families and invest in their children. Kenya has also taken important steps to empower its youth. The Government recently launched its comprehensive Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health policy, which is designed to give young people access to youth-friendly sexual and reproductive health services. And after the national Government made funding health programmes a county responsibility, several counties implemented and funded their own plans to expand access to family planning. These are the cornerstone of family planning progress.

The launch of the third annual FP2020 progress report provides an opportunity for advocates, partners and government leaders to celebrate progress made, identify areas where we are falling behind and collectively recommit to the FP2020 goal. However, this is only the start of the conversation. Countries such as Kenya must continue to share their successes and learn from each other's experiences. We must also search for new solutions – using the evidence available to drive decision-making. This will require identifying innovative sources of financing and building on effective in-country programmes so that we don't leave women and girls behind.

Now is the time to re-evaluate where we stand, ask hard questions and chart a path forward. The stakes are high. If we fail to meet our family planning goals, we will be putting the broader development agenda at risk. The global goals adopted at the United Nations in September represent a vision of a better world. Ensuring access to voluntary family planning so that every woman and girl has the means to invest in her future is the best way to make good on that promise.