We are committed to serving as actors in educating and raising awareness among communities about the use of reproductive health services in general, and family planning in particular, through the use of modern contraceptives in order to ensure the good health of mothers and children, with a view to furthering family and community development
(2) Zero unmet need for family planning information and services, and universal availability of quality, affordable and safe modern contraceptives.
By the end of 2020, implement the national action plan for the successful funding and implementation of the ICPD Programme of Action
(1) Intensify our efforts for the full, effective and accelerated implementation and funding of the ICPD Programme of Action, Key Actions for the Further Implementation of the Programme of Action of the ICPD, the outcomes of its reviews, and Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development.
Increase the contraceptive prevalence rate from 30.1 to 60 per cent by 2022; Operationalize family planning services in 29 per cent of the country's remaining health facilities to reach 100 per cent coverage by 2022.
(2) Zero unmet need for family planning information and services, and universal availability of quality, affordable and safe modern contraceptives.
Increase the proportion of women with access to antenatal care from 93 per cent to 100 per cent, focusing particularly on adolescent girls and young girls, while ensuring the availability of qualified staff by 2022; Increase the proportion of childbirths attended by qualified staff from 92 per cent to 100 per cent by 2022; Increase the coverage rate of health facilities providing BEmONC and CEmONC by 20 per cent by 2022;
(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.
Adopt a national comprehensive sexuality education policy by 2022;
(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.
Set up support funds for young people's entrepreneurial initiatives and professional training, which are adapted to the needs of the labour market, by 2022; Review the national strategy for the reproductive health of adolescents and young people by 2020.
(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.
Conduct general population and housing censuses and sectoral surveys that comply with international standards by 2022; Improve the quality of routine health information by reducing data gaps from 10 per cent to 2 per cent
(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.
Through their participation in comprehensive sexuality education programmes carried out by CSOs at the community level, provide adolescents and young people, especially the most vulnerable, with reliable information and the values, attitudes and life skills that will enable them to display responsible sexual behaviours.
(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.
Extend communication programmes on contraception in the country by training 290 peer educators and community health workers on the reproductive health of adolescents and young people by 2030, focusing on 30 per cent of rural areas in order to reach the populations most often left behind
(2) Zero unmet need for family planning information and services, and universal availability of quality, affordable and safe modern contraceptives.
Increase the budget allocated to health from 13 per cent to 15 per cent of the overall state budget by 2022, thus promoting the successful implementation of health programmes and the funding of the ICPD Programme of Action.
(6) Using national budget processes, including gender budgeting and auditing, increasing domestic financing and exploring new, participatory and innovative financing instruments and structures to ensure full, effective and accelerated implementation of the ICPD Programme of Action.