View allAll Photos Tagged ReproductiveHealth
Photo from a recent Citizen Hearings held in various districts in Uganda. Citizens are speaking up for what they want and providing feedback regarding the healthcare services they receive.
Uganda.
Photo from a recent Citizen Hearings held in various districts in Uganda. Citizens are speaking up for what they want and providing feedback regarding the healthcare services they receive.
Uganda.
With reinvigorated family planning and maternal health efforts underway, including FP2020 and planning for the post-Millennium Development Goal era, it is critical that there is equitable participation of women, youth, and their communities in the design, delivery, and monitoring of reproductive and maternal health policies and programs. Social accountability mechanisms create meaningful links between citizens, service providers, and governments that can in turn lead to more responsive, accountable, and effective health systems. In Malawi, the government and CARE are currently implementing a Community Score Card at the district level to improve health outcomes and ensure rights. Are such social accountability efforts the answer to keeping rights at the center of our sexual, reproductive and maternal health efforts?
More: www.wilsoncenter.org/event/social-accountability-the-answ...
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State Sen. Leticia Van de Putte who famously said during the filibuster, "At what point must a female senator raise her hand or her voice to be recognized over her male colleagues?"
Supporters are photographed showing their support for the “Names Not Numbers” campaign in New York City this week by promoting the hashtag #namesnotnumbers, signing the campaign’s petition, and demanding global leaders provide family planning, reproductive and maternal care to all, Friday, Sept. 12, 2014, in New York. (John Minchillo/AP Images for Doctors Of The World)
With reinvigorated family planning and maternal health efforts underway, including FP2020 and planning for the post-Millennium Development Goal era, it is critical that there is equitable participation of women, youth, and their communities in the design, delivery, and monitoring of reproductive and maternal health policies and programs. Social accountability mechanisms create meaningful links between citizens, service providers, and governments that can in turn lead to more responsive, accountable, and effective health systems. In Malawi, the government and CARE are currently implementing a Community Score Card at the district level to improve health outcomes and ensure rights. Are such social accountability efforts the answer to keeping rights at the center of our sexual, reproductive and maternal health efforts?
More: www.wilsoncenter.org/event/social-accountability-the-answ...
October 2, 2021. Easton, PA.
Easton community members marched in downtown Easton to protest Texas’ new near-total abortion ban, joining protesters across the nation calling for the protection of abortion rights. The law has drawn national headlines and several legal challenges. The U.S. Supreme Court refused a request to block the law, though its constitutionality has yet to be decided.
© 2021 Marilyn Humphries
IFGH Students' Outreach Group International Women's Day event in Queens University Belfast, 06/03/2013. Reproductive Health Dialogue titled: Universal Access to Reproductive Health. Speakers: Sadia Malick MRCOG PGCert MedEd; Maria Lohan, Senior Lecturer in Health Sciences at School of Nursing and Midwifery, Queen’s University Belfast; Ann Nolan, PhD candidate Trinity. Chair: David Weakliam
Speaking at the 126th Inter Parliamentary Union in Kampala, Uganda.
Next to him is Dr Anthony Lake and the host of the event, the speaker of the Ugandan Parliament, RT. Hon. Rebecca Alitwala Kadaga.
Alysia Reiner and Dr. Karen Tang MD.MPH photographed by George Chinsee for SHE Media Flow, on May 21,2024 at PMC Studios in New York City
Evaluation is a critical part of any development programming. Rigorous evaluations identify the successes, failures, and gaps in a given project, accumulating lessons learned that hopefully lead to more effective programming. Breaking new ground through their small-scale, community-based, and multi-sectoral approach, population, health, and environment (PHE) programs require a rethinking of traditional evaluation methods. Join us in a discussion about the history of PHE program evaluations and the path forward with John Pielemeier, an independent consultant focused on design, evaluation, and management of international development programs and projects, Vik Mohan, medical director of Blue Ventures, and Roger-Mark De Souza, director of population, environmental security, and resilience at the Wilson Center.
Read more: www.wilsoncenter.org/event/make-it-count-evaluating-popul...
Rapid population growth can be a contributing factor to both greenhouse gas emissions and vulnerability to climate stresses. Early childbearing, high fertility rates, and short birth intervals are associated with poor maternal and child health outcomes as well as lower educational attainment and work force participation, which directly impede women’s ability to participate and invest in climate change adaptation. However, the positive benefits of voluntary family planning, either for emissions reductions or adaptation, have not figured prominently in climate policy discussions or those related to improving access to family planning.
To address this gap, the Population Reference Bureau and Worldwatch Institute formed an international Population Dynamics and Climate-Compatible Development Expert Working Group to identify policy opportunities to increase investment in family planning in climate-sensitive development initiatives. Join us for a presentation about the working group’s report and discussion with select working group members.
Read more: www.wilsoncenter.org/event/bridging-the-gap-conversation-...
In this video, our patient shares her IVF success story. Testimonial by a successful conceived couple from Prime IVF and Fertility Centre Gurgaon, the best in the Delhi / NCR region for IVF treatment. Prime IVF centre is known for its high success rate for infertility treatment.
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IFGH Students' Outreach Group International Women's Day event in Queens University Belfast, 06/03/2013. Reproductive Health Dialogue titled: Universal Access to Reproductive Health. Speakers: Sadia Malick MRCOG PGCert MedEd; Maria Lohan, Senior Lecturer in Health Sciences at School of Nursing and Midwifery, Queen’s University Belfast; Ann Nolan, PhD candidate Trinity. Chair: David Weakliam
Photo from a recent Citizen Hearings held in various districts in Uganda. Citizens are speaking up for what they want and providing feedback regarding the healthcare services they receive.
Uganda.
IFGH Students' Outreach Group International Women's Day event in Queens University Belfast, 06/03/2013. Reproductive Health Dialogue titled: Universal Access to Reproductive Health. Speakers: Sadia Malick MRCOG PGCert MedEd; Maria Lohan, Senior Lecturer in Health Sciences at School of Nursing and Midwifery, Queen’s University Belfast; Ann Nolan, PhD candidate Trinity. Chair: David Weakliam
Rapid population growth can be a contributing factor to both greenhouse gas emissions and vulnerability to climate stresses. Early childbearing, high fertility rates, and short birth intervals are associated with poor maternal and child health outcomes as well as lower educational attainment and work force participation, which directly impede women’s ability to participate and invest in climate change adaptation. However, the positive benefits of voluntary family planning, either for emissions reductions or adaptation, have not figured prominently in climate policy discussions or those related to improving access to family planning.
To address this gap, the Population Reference Bureau and Worldwatch Institute formed an international Population Dynamics and Climate-Compatible Development Expert Working Group to identify policy opportunities to increase investment in family planning in climate-sensitive development initiatives. Join us for a presentation about the working group’s report and discussion with select working group members.
Read more: www.wilsoncenter.org/event/bridging-the-gap-conversation-...