BULLETIN NOVEMBRE – DECEMBRE |N°. 6| 2019

Foire scientifique pour le partage des connaissances  sur la Santé Sexuelle et Reproductive des Adolescents et Jeunes

Au Burundi, les adolescents et jeunes sont confrontés à plusieurs défis en matière de leur santé sexuelle et reproductive. La plupart rencontre des obstacles dans l’accès à l’information avec des  possibilités limitées  d’accès aux services dont ils ont besoin. C’est dans ce cadre que le Ministère de la Santé Publique et de la Lutte contre le Sida en collaboration avec Share Net Burundi a organisé le 18 décembre 2019 une foire de partage des connaissances sur la santé sexuelle et reproductive des adolescents et jeunes.

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Contraceptive eligibility for women at high risk of HIV

1 BACKGROUND

Access to sexual and reproductive health services and information, including a comprehensive range of contraceptive methods, is fundamental to the rights and well-being of women and adolescent girls (1–4). There is a wide range of hormonal and non-hormonal modern contraceptive methods providing substantial individual and public health benefits. A core part of the work of the World Health Organization (WHO) is the development and maintenance of up-to-date, evidence-based guidance on contraceptive safety for individuals with particular medical conditions or medically relevant characteristics (5). The Medical eligibility criteria for contraceptive use (the MEC), fifth edition, offers national policy-makers and family planning programmes a comprehensive set of recommendations on the medical safety of contraceptive methods, allowing for the informed development of national policies, protocols and programmes (5). Global guidance about medical safety and eligibility facilitates the removal of unnecessary medical barriers to contraception.
For over 20 years, the MEC has been used by countries to maximize safety and improve the quality of contraceptive care offered. Guidance about safety is kept up to date through continuous monitoring and reviews of published literature. In 2015, WHO released the fifth edition of the MEC (5). This edition contains more than 2000 recommendations for 25 different contraceptive methods, within the context of more than 80 medical conditions or medically relevant personal characteristics. Depending on the individual, more than one condition may need to be considered when making an informed contraceptive choice (5). The recommendations in the MEC are based on several considerations, including whether the use of a contraceptive method worsens the medical condition or creates
additional health risks, and whether the condition makes the contraceptive method less effective (5).
The MEC is part of a set of tools aiming to improve contraceptive coverage and care throughout the world. The MEC informs decisions about who might use a particular contraceptive method, through information and guidance about the safety and appropriateness of contraceptive care. The Selected practice recommendations for contraceptive use (the SPR) provides guidance on how to safely and effectively use various contraceptive methods (6). WHO produces a range of tools to support the use and implementation of contraceptive guidance, such as the MEC wheel and the Global handbook for providers (7, 8).
Since 1996, the MEC has applied a four-category scale to indicate medical eligibility for particular contraceptive methods in the presence of particular conditions or individual characteristics (e.g. at high risk of HIV). For each condition or characteristic, contraceptive methods are placed into one of four numbered categories: 1. A condition for which there is no restriction for the use of contraceptive method. 2. A condition where the advantages of using the method generally outweigh the theoretical or proven risks. 3. A condition where the theoretical or proven risks usually outweigh the advantages of using the method. 4. A condition which represents an unacceptable health risk if the contraceptive method is used.

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Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs in Emergencies

KEY STATISTICS

• Nearly 1.2 million adolescents die each year, mainly to preventable causes—such as complications from pregnancy and/or giving birth—around the world.1 Two-thirds of these deaths occurred in the least developed countries in Africa and Southeast Asia.1

• Approximately 23 million girls aged 15-19 years have an unmet need for contraception, and every year approximately 3.9 million girls aged 15-19 years undergo unsafe abortions.2

• Globally, about 1 in 5 women aged 20-24 were married before the age of 18.3

• In the least developed countries, around 40% of women were married before 18, with 12% of women married before 15 years old.4 Girls who marry before 18 years old are more likely to experience violence within the marriage than girls who marry later.5

• Estimates of deaths caused by direct conflicts suggest that more than 90% of all casualties occur among young adult males.6

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