Facilitating Universal Access to Reproductive Health
ROME, Oct. 9, 2012 /CNW/ - Helping infertile women become pregnant and
fertile women avoid unintended pregnancies are two sides of the same
coin: reproductive health. As defined by the WHO: "Reproductive health
implies that people are able to have a responsible, satisfying and safe
sex life and that they have the capability to reproduce and the freedom
to decide if, when and how often to do so".
FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics, is involved
in both the areas: infertility and contraception. FIGO2012 Congress in
Rome, Italy, staged two major occurrences: the presentation of the
"FIGO Fertility Tool Box™" and the third edition of the "Emergency
Contraceptive Pills: Medical and Service Delivery Guidelines".
The Fertility Tool Box™ (http://www.figo.org/news/resources/FIGO_Fertility_Tool_Box) is an instrument focused on alleviating the burden of infertility.
"When developing it we decided to work within the range of generalist
obstetricians and gynecologists and down to midwives, taking into
account the sensitivities with respect to culture, religion, politics
and economics," Professor David Adamson, Chair of the FIGO Committee
for Reproductive Medicine, said.
The Tool Box™ is simple and flexible. It consists of 6 components
dealing with overcoming personal and societal barriers to infertility
care, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment, plus the Fertility Daisy™.
The Fertility Daisy™ deals with why one should care about infertility.
"Infertility, specifically in low resource settings, is important and
its management justified by the positive impact on quality of life,
non-discrimination, family planning, prevention of sexually-transmitted
infections, affordability - each petal of the daisy symbolising one
item. It is hoped that this tool will be used to increase access to
quality, cost-effective infertility prevention and management",
Professor Adamson said.
"Emergency contraception guidelines were created by the International
Consortium for Emergency Contraception in 2000. The 2012 - third -
edition is endorsed by FIGO", Professor Ian Fraser, Honorary Secretary
of FIGO, explained.
"Despite the availability of effective methods of contraception, many
pregnancies are mistimed or unwanted and may carry a high risk of
morbidity and mortality, particularly in settings where safe abortion
is not accessible. Many of these unintended pregnancies can be avoided
using emergency contraception. Furthermore, emergency contraception
provides a sense of security for those women who have experienced the
life-changing trauma of sexual assault," he said.
"The guidelines reflect the latest evidence and are intended to assist family planning programmes and providers in assuring that the women they serve can use emergency contraceptive pills effectively and safely," he added.
SOURCE: FIGO2012
For further information:For media information: figo2012@hcc-milano.com, Diego Freri, phone +39-335-8378332