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Politics & Policy U.S. Policies Contribute to Spread of HIV, Childbirth-, Abortion-Related Deaths Among Women, Conference Attendees SaySeptember 3, 2004 U.S. policies concerning international sex education and reproductive health are contributing to childbirth- and abortion-related deaths as well as the spread of HIV among women around the world, attendees of the Countdown 2015 conference in London said on Thursday on the final day of the meeting, the Los Angeles Times reports (Daniszewski, Los Angeles Times, 9/3). Several nongovernmental agencies -- including the International Planned Parenthood Federation, Population Action International and Family Care International -- held the conference to mark the 10-year anniversary of the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, Egypt. During the Cairo conference, 179 countries approved a plan to enhance the reproductive health and rights of women throughout the world. Targets set at the 1994 conference aimed to provide family planning options and education to prevent unwanted pregnancies as a way to reduce world poverty and hunger and improve women's rights in developing countries. The groups released a report earlier this week saying that while some countries have made progress toward meeting these goals, other countries have made "little or no progress" in maternal health, HIV/AIDS prevention and education and access to and funding for contraceptives since the Cairo conference (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 9/1). U.S. Policies, Funding Delegate Comments on U.S. Role Conference attendees also criticized the Bush administration's promotion of abstinence-only education as a way to prevent the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV, the Times reports (Los Angeles Times, 9/3). The law (HR 1298) authorizing the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief endorses the "ABC" HIV prevention model -- abstinence, be faithful, use condoms -- and specifies that one-third of the bill's HIV/AIDS prevention funding should be used for abstinence and monogamy programs (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 5/27). Marcella Howell, director of Advocates for Youth, said that the administration is "burying its head in the sand" by endorsing an "ideologically driven abstinence-only until marriage program that leaves young people with little information" to prevent HIV and unwanted pregnancies, the Times reports (Los Angeles Times, 9/3). "The U.S. government has already spent over $1 billion domestically on failed programs," Howell said, adding, "And now the administration is poised to export this unproven policy around the globe as an HIV prevention strategy for youth." Wirth said that the administration also has "attack[ed]" the efficacy of condom usage as a means to prevent the HIV transmission, Reuters reports (Reuters, 9/2). "In a reversal of its historic role, [the United States] has emerged as one of the most significant obstacles to progress," Sinding said, adding, "This insidious war on women's health and rights is threatening some of the very real progress that has been made during the last decade (Los Angeles Times, 9/3). Back to other news for September 3, 2004
![]() HIV/AIDS Vaccine Experts Call for More Collaboration in Research, Say Effective Vaccine at Least Decade Away ![]() 200 AIDS Advocates Protest Against Bush Administration's HIV/AIDS Policies in New York's Grand Central Station This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report. Visit the Kaiser Family Foundation's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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