Call for providing sexual health education to young people

Kathmandu, February 1

A new report from the United Nations Population Fund finds that nearly one billion young people between 15 and 24 years in the Asia and Pacific region are having sex before marriage than ever before, yet many face a dangerous dearth of information on sexual and reproductive health, and lack the critical life-skills needed to manage safe, consensual sexual relationships.

The report calls on countries in the region to urgently expand and improve sexual and reproductive health services as well as comprehensive sexuality education for young people.

A press statement issued here today by UNFPA said youth also face major physical, socio-economic and cultural barriers to accessing services according to the report “Sexual and reproductive health of young people in Asia and the Pacific: A review of issues, policies and programmes”, which includes data and examples from across 36 countries, including Nepal.

“Without knowledge, information and access to quality care, young people face far bigger risks of unwanted pregnancy, unsafe abortion and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV,” the statement quoted Yoriko Yasukawa, UNFPA’s Asia-Pacific Regional Director.

Yasukawa further said, “Development and globalisation are helping to change attitudes to sex and relationships, so policies, programmes and laws on sexual and reproductive health must be reviewed and improved to acknowledge and reflect this reality, and best meet young people’s needs.”

Close to 11 million unsafe abortions took place in the region in 2015, and 34 per cent of these were performed on women under 25 years of age, the report states.

Up to 63 per cent of adolescent pregnancies in Asia-Pacific are unintended, leading to further, larger numbers of unsafe abortions, which are often unreported, reads the statement.

“Adolescents and young person deserve a sound public health response. WHO advocates for enabling the policy environment in all relevant ministries in support of adolescent health and development.

National governments must strengthen the availability and use of strategic information related to health and other development domains of adolescents to design effective programmes and monitor their implementation,” said Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, regional director, WHO for the South-East Asia Region in the statement.

The report was produced by Burnet Institute, Australia for UNFPA in collaboration with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation and the World Health Organisation South-East Asia Regional Office.

“Higher risk behaviour, including early sexual debut, multiple partners, and sex under the influence of alcohol, are prevalent in some countries, and up to 10 per cent of males and 20 per cent of females report having had a sexually transmitted infection or symptoms in the last 12 months,” the report states.

An estimated 620,000 youth (15-24) are living with HIV across the region with 1,200 in Nepal.

The report also states over 30 per cent of girls aged 15-19 had experienced physical or sexual violence in four countries the Marshall Islands, Pakistan, Timor-Leste and Vanuatu.

The report recommends that governments launch more and better research to address knowledge gaps, especially research on young, unmarried and sexually active young people, including adolescents aged 10 to 14.

It calls for increased efforts to build a supportive environment for young people’s sexual and reproductive health to address socio-cultural barriers, laws and policies, and earlier comprehensive sexuality education that reaches everyone.