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Nigeria needs 5bn dollars annually to meet contraceptive needs- SOGON

Nigeria needs 5bn dollars annually to meet contraceptive needs- SOGON

 

A Consultant Obstetrician and Gynaecologist, Prof. Christopher Aimakhu, says that in order to meet women’s need for contraceptive products, it would cost the country five billion dollars.

Aimakhu said this during the three-day training on Sexual and Reproductive Health for media practitioners in Nigeria.

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The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports the training was organized by the Rotary Action Group for Reproductive, Maternal, and Child Health (RMCH).

“Fully meeting women’s needs for both contraceptive services and maternal and newborn health care in Nigeria would cost a total of five billion dollars each year.

“That is roughly the same cost as meeting the need for maternal and newborn care alone,” he said.

Aimakhu, who is the Secretary-General Society of Gynaecology and Obstetrics of Nigeria (SOGON), said that the budgetary allocation for family planning dropped from N1.2 billion to N300 million in 2019.

According to him decreasing allocations for family planning and consistent delay in the release of family planning funds contributes to the low percentage of family planning uptake in Nigeria.

He said that investment in family planning would improve the quality of care for current users and coverage for new users.

He said that family planning was an important tool in the prevention of unwanted pregnancies, reduced child and maternal mortality, and unsafe abortions.

“If the unmet need for modern contraception in Nigeria were satisfied, unintended pregnancies would drop by 77 percent from 2.5 million to 555,000 per year.

“As a result, the annual number of unplanned births would decrease from 885,000 to 200,000 and the number of abortions would drop from 1.3 million to 287,000,” he said.

Aimakhu called for collaborative efforts of all stakeholders including not-for-profit organizations and civil society organizations to improve family planning access and uptake. (NAN)

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