Sexual and Reproductive Health for All: twenty Years of The Global Strategy
Thirty years back, the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD), held in Cairo, Egypt, underscored the right of all individuals to achieve the greatest requirement of sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR). In 2004, WHO released a reproductive health technique - ratified by 191 Member States at the Fifty-seventh World Health Assembly - that enhanced the midpoint of SRHR to societies and economies (Resolution WHA57.12). These frameworks are grounded in gender equality and recognize the unvarying importance of sexual health in attaining health for all.
WHO researchers dealt with Member States, civil society and neighborhoods throughout all regions to operationalize a Worldwide Strategy to cover the 5 essential pillars for enhancing SRHR:
- enhancing antenatal, perinatal, postpartum and newborn care
- providing family preparation services
- eliminating risky abortion
- fighting sexually sent infections (STIs).
- promoting sexual health.
Resolution WHA57.12 further informed SRHR policies and directing files in a number of areas and Member States. For example, Latin America's 2013 Montevideo Consensus and Africa's Maputo Strategy from 2016 (building upon the initial 2006 plan) both consist of language and ideas reinforcing and promoting SRHR.
" The global strategy is the fundamental policy document that centres WHO's required for sexual and reproductive health to date," stated Dr Pascale Allotey, Director of the UN Special Programme on Human Reproduction (HRP) and WHO's Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health. "The text stays important in contributing to directing research top priorities and dealing with nations to develop useful resources to ensure comprehensive SRHR across the life course."
Significant progress has been made over the last twenty years within each of the 5 pillars, including these examples.
Thirty years back, the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD), held in Cairo, Egypt, underscored the right of all individuals to achieve the greatest requirement of sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR). In 2004, WHO released a reproductive health technique - ratified by 191 Member States at the Fifty-seventh World Health Assembly - that enhanced the midpoint of SRHR to societies and economies (Resolution WHA57.12). These frameworks are grounded in gender equality and recognize the unvarying importance of sexual health in attaining health for all.
WHO researchers dealt with Member States, civil society and neighborhoods throughout all regions to operationalize a Worldwide Strategy to cover the 5 essential pillars for enhancing SRHR:
- enhancing antenatal, perinatal, postpartum and newborn care
- providing family preparation services
- eliminating risky abortion
- fighting sexually sent infections (STIs).
- promoting sexual health.
Resolution WHA57.12 further informed SRHR policies and directing files in a number of areas and Member States. For example, Latin America's 2013 Montevideo Consensus and Africa's Maputo Strategy from 2016 (building upon the initial 2006 plan) both consist of language and ideas reinforcing and promoting SRHR.
" The global strategy is the fundamental policy document that centres WHO's required for sexual and reproductive health to date," stated Dr Pascale Allotey, Director of the UN Special Programme on Human Reproduction (HRP) and WHO's Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health. "The text stays important in contributing to directing research top priorities and dealing with nations to develop useful resources to ensure comprehensive SRHR across the life course."
Significant progress has been made over the last twenty years within each of the 5 pillars, including these examples.