The Bali chapter of the Indonesia Family
Planning Association (PKBI) launched its latest family planning program,
entitled “Family Planning Revolution”, targeting adolescents and
unmarried couples. In 2011, PKBI Bali recorded more than 1,400 patients
with unplanned pregnancies. More than 300 patients among them had been
unable to access reproductive health-care services because they were
below 24 years old, while some 300 more patients were unmarried. On
average, every month PKBI Bali receives 57 patients with unplanned
pregnancies.
“We were unable to provide sexually
active youths and the unmarried with access to reproductive health-care
because contraception was previously only for married couples,” said I
Ketut Sukanatha, executive director of PKBI Bali. Sukanatha also
acknowledged the increasing presence of middlemen for illegal abortion
clinics outside the PKBI Bali office. “They would say that our clinic is
closed, so that the patients would go to their clinics instead,” he
said. Sukanatha expected the National Population and Family Planning
Agency (BKKBN) and the health agency, as well as the education agency,
to take part in this revolutionary campaign for reproductive health.
Bali reproductive health expert I Nyoman
Mangku Karmaya said it was about time women’s reproductive health and
sexual rights became a top priority to save the lives of mothers and
babies. In this revolutionary family planning program, the meaning of
family has also been extended to not only include heterosexual couples,
but also homosexuals and bisexuals. Infrastructure support, including
medicine, funding and counseling centers, are expected to be made
available for the program. “All minority groups are welcomed. Services
will not only include family planning, but also care for those with
sexually transmitted disease and HIV/AIDS,” said Karmaya.
The promotion of condoms will be boosted
in the program, because contraception is regarded as representing gender
equality between men and women. Services for men in the villages,
including voluntary counseling and testing for sexually transmitted
disease, will also be made available. “The more men engage in family
planning, the more women and children we hope to protect from sexually
transmitted diseases and HIV,” said Karmaya.
source : bali daily
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