UN/Int'l : A United Nations population report calling for global contraceptive
access has drawn fire from doctors and pro-life advocates who say the
funding would better spent preventing maternal deaths.
“A push to increase spending on contraceptives in developing countries
by the United Nations Population Fund is at best misguided, and at worst
harmful to women and families,” Dr. John F. Brehany, executive director
of Catholic Medical Association, told CNA Nov. 15.
On Nov. 14, the United Nations Population Fund released its annual report on the “State of World Population.”
This year's report – titled “By Choice, Not By Chance” – links family
planning to international development, declares it a global “right” for
women, and calls for the removal of any social and financial obstacles
to it.
UNFPA included some population control advocacy and depicted access to
family planning as a “sound economic investment.” It also claims that
the use of contraceptives will “improve” global health.
Dr. Brehany countered, however, that oral contraceptive pills
“negatively impact women's health in significant ways – by increasing
the incidence of breast cancer, strokes, and STDs.”
He also pointed out that an article in the January issue of 'The Lancet
Infectious Diseases' found that the use of injectable contraceptives in
Africa has been shown to double the risk of HIV infection.
“Women’s greatest needs,” he said, “are for education and healthcare
resources for prenatal care, safe childbirth, and general health.
Providing resources for natural methods of fertility awareness and
regulation are not only cheaper than artificial contraceptives, they are
better for women's health and for the stability of marriages.”
The UNFPA report summary said family planning is “almost universally
recognized as an intrinsic right” that should be “available to all.” It
said family planning should be promoted as “a right” which enables “a
whole range of other rights.”
Wendy Wright, an official at the Catholic Family and Human Rights
Institute and former head of Concerned Women for America, called this
“ludicrous.”
“The UN doesn't have the authority to declare contraception a human
right, but particularly an agency of the UN doesn't have the right to
declare something a human right; it debases the entire concept of human
rights, to declare a commodity or a product a human right,” she said in a
Nov. 15 interview with CNA.
“The UN hasn't declared food a human right, and yet we need food to
survive. So its ludicrous to think that contraception would be a human
right when the most necessary items for survival have not been
considered human rights.”
Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute president, Austin Ruse,
stated that “it is precisely such debasement of authentic human rights
which puts people in the developing world in grave danger. Human rights
are about freedom of religion, democratic self-determination, freedom of
assembly.”
Wright considers the United Nations Population Fund's claim that “its
products and services should be universally available and paid for by
others” to be “crass self interest.”
She also pointed out that “many countries are experiencing
depopulation. Sadly, the UNFPA does not recognize the current status of
the world's population, and that the most serious problems are ones of
depopulation, not over-population.”
The report further claims that meeting the need for family planning for
its estimate of 222 million women who lack it would cost some $8.1
billion every year.
Wright said that in light of the current fiscal crisis being
experienced by most nations, “right now seems to be a bizarre time for
UNFPA to be claiming that its pet project ought to be getting an
additional $8 billion a year.”