The standard of integrated and differentiated care for adolescents will be updated with a gender perspective.
(4) Access for all adolescents and youth, especially girls, to comprehensive and age-responsive information, education and adolescent-friendly comprehensive, quality and timely services to be able to make free and informed decisions and choices about their sexuality and reproductive lives, to adequately protect themselves from unintended pregnancies, all forms of sexual and gender-based violence and harmful practices, sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, to facilitate a safe transition into adulthood.
Implementation of national certification and quality standards for differentiated care for adolescents at health care facilities.
(11) Committing to the notion that nothing about young people’s health and well-being can be discussed and decided upon without their meaningful involvement and participation (“nothing about us, without us”).
Incorporate sexual and reproductive health indicators for girls and adolescents in the SUS, and improve treatment records to provide evidence broken down by sex and age, which will allow measures and the investment of priority resources to focus on indigenous peoples, people of African descent, people with disabilities, LGBTQI+ people who live in rural areas, and children and adolescents, by 2030
(10) Providing quality, timely and disaggregated data, that ensures privacy of citizens and is also inclusive of younger adolescents, investing in digital health innovations, including in big data systems, and improvement of data systems to inform policies aimed at achieving sustainable development.
Conduct training for medical staff on sexual and reproductive rights, gender and high-quality and empathetic care.
(4) Access for all adolescents and youth, especially girls, to comprehensive and age-responsive information, education and adolescent-friendly comprehensive, quality and timely services to be able to make free and informed decisions and choices about their sexuality and reproductive lives, to adequately protect themselves from unintended pregnancies, all forms of sexual and gender-based violence and harmful practices, sexually transmitted infections, including HIV/AIDS, to facilitate a safe transition into adulthood.
Incorporate in the statute for public health officials, as a requirement for holding the role and for promotion, the completion of hours of training on SSR, gender, and high-quality and empathetic care that is respectful of patients’ rights, within five years.
(3) Zero preventable maternal deaths and maternal morbidities, such as obstetric fistulas, by, inter alia, integrating a comprehensive package of sexual and reproductive health interventions, including access to safe abortion to the full extent of the law, measures for preventing and avoiding unsafe abortions, and for the provision of post-abortion care, into national UHC strategies, policies and programmes, and to protect and ensure all individuals’ right to bodily integrity, autonomy and reproductive rights, and to provide access to essential services in support of these rights.
Promote the Law on Sexual and Reproductive Rights and carry out an implementation plan, by 2025.
(2) Zero unmet need for family planning information and services, and universal availability of quality, affordable and safe modern contraceptives.
Work in conjunction with the Ministry of Education and use new technologies to educate adolescents and young people on SRR, sexuality and reproduction.
(8) Investing in the education, employment opportunities, health, including family planning and sexual and reproductive health services, of adolescents and youth, especially girls, so as to fully harness the promises of the demographic dividend.
Comply with Constitutional Court Sentence 0206/2014, which ensures access to legal termination of pregnancy on four grounds, stating that treatment by medical staff is obligatory because access to health is a human right.
(2) Zero unmet need for family planning information and services, and universal availability of quality, affordable and safe modern contraceptives.
Monitor the implementation of the protocol for services providing legal termination of pregnancy for girls and adolescents under 15 years of age and ensure LTP is a human right in access to health.
(12) Ensuring that the basic humanitarian needs and rights of affected populations, especially that of girls and women, are addressed as critical components of responses to humanitarian and environmental crises, as well as fragile and post-crisis reconstruction contexts, through the provision of access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive health information, education and services, including access to safe abortion services to the full extent of the law, and post-abortion care, to significantly reduce maternal mortality and morbidity, sexual and gender-based violence and unplanned pregnancies under these conditions.
Design and implement a communications strategy to promote contraceptive methods and the legal termination of pregnancy in girls and adolescents under 15 years of age.
(2) Zero unmet need for family planning information and services, and universal availability of quality, affordable and safe modern contraceptives.