The report, carried out by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), notes over sixty per cent of unintended pregnancies result in an abortion, while an estimated forty-five per cent of all abortions around the world are dangerous.
According
to report about one-hundred-and-twenty-one- million pregnancies around the
world each year are unintended with this amounting to almost half of all
pregnancies, according to a new United Nations study.
Researchers
said this equates to an average of around 331,000 unplanned pregnancies each
day as they warned the issue constitutes a “human rights crisis” which has
far-reaching ramifications for “societies, women and girls and global health”.
Researchers,
whose section of the United Nations strives to boost reproductive and maternal
health, said some five to 13 per cent of all maternal deaths are the by-product
of unsafe backstreet, clandestine abortions. The pregnancy terminations are
carried out in contexts where abortion is illegal, highly restricted or too
expensive to afford.
Rose
Caldwell, chief executive of Plan International UK, said: “The scale of these
figures is alarming, but the reality behind the numbers is that far too many
women and girls still have no choice about whether or not to become pregnant.
“They may
be survivors of abuse or exploitation; they may have been forced to marry
early; or they may have lacked access to modern contraception or the education
they need to understand their own bodies.”
Ms
Caldwell warned the situation constitutes a “global injustice” which world
leaders are not taking enough action to address.
She added:
“The UK government especially should see these figures as an alarm bell. Last
year, it made cuts to overseas aid that included a shameful 85 per cent
reduction in funding for sexual and reproductive health services.
“We warned
that the decision could harm thousands of women and girls and hinder the
struggle for gender equality. The Foreign Office’s own assessment raised
similar concerns. Yet still the government pressed ahead with its plans.”
Ms
Caldwell urged Rishi Sunak, the UK Chancellor, to “immediately restore the aid
budget to 0.7 of GNI and for the foreign secretary to deliver on her commitment
to restore the women and girls’ budget to pre-cut levels as soon as possible”.
She added:
“The government must ensure that areas hardest hit by the cuts – including
sexual and reproductive health and rights – are prioritised.”
The report
found gender inequality and impeded development are behind high levels of
unintended pregnancies around the world. Researchers warned an estimated 257
million women around the world who want to avoid pregnancy do not have safe,
modern forms of contraception.
“Where
data is available, nearly a quarter of all women are not able to say no to
sex,” researchers said.
Other
important factors which cause unintended pregnancies were cited by researchers
as “sexual and reproductive healthcare and information, contraceptive options
that don’t suit women’s bodies or circumstances, harmful norms and stigma surrounding
women controlling their own fertility and bodies, and sexual violence and
reproductive coercion”.
Dr Natalia
Kanem, executive director of the UNFPA, said: “This report is a wakeup call.
The staggering number of unintended pregnancies represents a global failure to
uphold women and girls’ basic human rights.
“For the
women affected, the most life-altering reproductive choice - whether or not to
become pregnant - is no choice at all. By putting the power to make this most
fundamental decision squarely in the hands of women and girls, societies can
ensure that motherhood is an aspiration and not an inevitability.”
The UNFPA
warned the war which has recently broken out in Ukraine and other world crises
could cause a rise in yet more unintended pregnancies due to women struggling
to access contraception and sexual violence shooting up.
Dr Kanem
said: “If you had 15 minutes to leave your house, what would you take? Would
you grab your passport? Food? Would you remember your contraception?
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