| Youth's Reproductive Health Targets Must Be Included in the Millennium Declaration: |
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Also available in [PDF ] format. The State of Youth's Reproductive HealthPeople under the age of 25 represent nearly half of the world's population,[1] giving them a powerful role in the world's health and future. Despite youth's diversity in culture, background, language, and socioeconomic status, their lives reflect similar, intersecting issues and events. For youth ages 15 through 24, life can be overshadowed by reproductive health issues, including unintended pregnancy as well as HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
Youth's decisions about their sexual and reproductive health affect not only their lives, but also the health of the global community. Addressing the sexual and reproductive health needs of young people ages 15 to 24 is essential to meeting the vision laid out at the Millennium Summit. Poverty and Youth's Reproductive HealthPoverty and youth's reproductive health are integrally linked. Most notable is the impact of the HIV and AIDS epidemic on the economies and labor forces of the hardest hit nations. Young people worldwide now account for half of all new HIV infections.[1,2] Research further indicates that half of 15-year-old youth in the worst affected countries may die of AIDS,[5] leaving behind depleted work forces and little hope for sustainable development. Incorporating Youth's Reproductive Health into the Millennium DeclarationThe General Assembly of the United Nations has the opportunity to acknowledge the meaningful part that youth's reproductive health will play in meeting the Millennium Development Goals. The MDGs cannot be met without focused and strategic attention on improving the reproductive health of the world's two billion young people. As such, United Nations members should advocate for and support incorporating targets and indicators of youth's reproductive health into the Millennium Declaration. Specifically, members should advocate at regional forums and at the Millennium Project +5 in September 2005 for the inclusion of a goal from the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) to "ensure universal access to reproductive health by 2015." The Millennium Project's Task Force on Maternal/Child Health and Gender Equity recommends including this goal as a target to MDG no. 5. Additionally, the Task Force has recommended the addition of two indicators that are critical to tracking youth's reproductive health: HIV prevalence among 15- to 24-year-old women (to be added as an indicator of progress towards MDG no. 6) and adolescent fertility rates (to be added as an indicator of progress towards MDGs no. 3 and no. 5). Youth's Involvement in the MDGsYouth's reproductive health and, in fact, young people themselves are the key to meeting and sustaining the goals of the Millennium Summit. By including targets and indicators related to youth's reproductive health in the MDGs, the summit will encourage governments to move successfully towards creating a healthy and economically secure populace. Further, young people have much to say about what will best assist them to meet these targets. As such, governments should include young people in developing and implementing their country-level strategies as well as in country delegations to General Assembly meetings regarding the MDGs. The reproductive choices of the world's two billion young people will largely determine the quality of life on this planet for decades to come. Youth's reproductive health must be targeted in the MDGs to assist nations in meeting the vision of the Millennium Summit.
Special thanks to the Global Health Council for its informative publication, Commitments: Youth Reproductive Health, the World Bank, and the Millennium Development Goals. |