The Dose - What Happens When Young People Can’t Access Reproductive Health Care? (Rebroadcast)
Episode Date: August 21, 2020***Originally Aired Feb 2020*** More than 800 women across the globe die each day from complications related to pregnancy. Some of them bleed to death. Some of them develop infections or severe life-l...ong medical conditions because they are delivering their babies in unsafe environments. Many of these deaths could be prevented if more young people had access to birth control and other reproductive health care. Pathfinder International is a nonprofit working with communities in 20 countries to make this a reality. On this episode of The Dose, Pathfinder CEO Lois Quam, a member of the Commonwealth Fund’s board, recounts some of the stories she’s heard from young people around the world. Quam tells host Shanoor Seervai about the challenges they face in deciding whether and when to have children — and how their lives change when they are able to make this choice.
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Millions of girls and women across the globe have lost access to reproductive health care because of COVID-19.
Between lockdowns and disruptions in medical supplies, women in countries from Kenya to India are struggling to get the care they need.
The result? A surge in teen pregnancies, unsafe abortions, and shortages of contraceptive pills and devices.
When we first aired this episode of The Dose, which was before the World Health Organization
declared COVID-19 a global pandemic, more than 800 women were dying each day from complications
related to pregnancy. We're bringing it back today because it's a sobering reminder of how
difficult it is for many young people to get reproductive health care and how much worse
this situation could get. Here's the show. The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund,
a foundation dedicated to health care for everyone. There was one really interesting nurse who said,
you know, this woman came to me,
this young woman who wasn't married came to me
and asked for family planning, and I said no
because I didn't think she should be needing it.
And the next time I saw her, she was heavily pregnant,
and she died as a result of that pregnancy. And this nurse said,
you know, it was my decision that led to that.
Hi, everyone. Welcome to The Dose. You just heard from Lois Quam, who heads Pathfinder
International, an organization committed to
expanding access to reproductive health care across the globe.
Today, Lois is going to talk about what happens when young people don't have access to birth
control, what it means for their health and their lives, and how Pathfinder is working
with local communities to change that.
Lois, welcome to the show.
Well, thank you so much. I'm delighted to be with you today.
Let's get started by really digging into what the problem is. What happens when young people
don't have access to reproductive health care and birth control? Well, let me give you two statistics
to start out. There are 1.8 billion young people in the world today. This is a huge number of young
people, the most at any time in the history of the world, of course. And of course, they bring
so much talent and creativity to help us solve all the challenges we have in front of us.
The second statistic I'd give you, which points at the part of the challenge, is today across the
world, 45% of all pregnancies are unintended. That's almost half. Yeah, yeah. And women who
have said that they'd like to use contraception, but don't have access to it, account for over 80% of those pregnancies. And by some estimates, if, if every woman and every girl who wanted to have contraception was able to have contraception at that time, that number would go from 45% to well under 10% in
terms of unintended pregnancy and so let's think about what that means in the
life of one girl in this 1.8 million people she's young smart energetic she
is 12 13 years old she is going to school. She's learning. She's getting ideas
about her future. Maybe she will be, maybe she'll be a doctor. Maybe she'll do something else.
And she goes through puberty, kind of understands what that means, has challenges getting menstrual supplies,
but keeps going to school, very motivated. And then she meets a young boy that she likes quite
a bit. And they're about 15 years old now. And they start seeing each other and she's pregnant.
And she has to set aside all those dreams.
She has challenges.
The family's not too happy about it.
She and the young man get married.
They don't really have the resources to set up a household very effectively.
She drops out of school.
She has a very tough time giving birth because she, you know, just isn't fully developed as a woman. So she has a very tough time delivering the child and has some lifelong injuries that result from that. And there she is.
There she is.
You know, somebody that we need to come up with the creative solutions
to the world's challenges, you know, is now struggling at home
with one child, some lifelong disability,
and, you know, just trying to put food on the table. And that happens every day,
over and over and over again, and it doesn't need to.
I mean, there's so much in the scenario you just described. Let's start with this idea of
women, young girls entering pubertyberty but not really knowing that much about
what's going on. I imagine that in many of the parts of the world where you work
young people don't really have access to sex education the way that young people
in the US may have. Well you know this is a global problem. It is a problem in the U.S. as well.
At Pathfinder, we focus globally, so that's where I'll focus. But yeah, it's a challenge. It's a
challenge to, in a lot of places, young people don't get good education about how, you know, how to avoid pregnancy,
even at times what, how you become pregnant. I had a young woman say to me, you know, I
really didn't realize that this was a result of having sex. And she said, after I had two kids nine months apart, I did,
but one of the babies died, and it was just a huge, huge thing.
So none of this needs to happen because we know how to provide this education,
and there are lots of different kinds of contraception, And so the opportunity for a young person to have this understanding,
to be able to decide that they want to use contraception
and then pick a form of contraception that works well for them, that exists.
Right. Now, obviously, a baby dying is a terrible health consequence. It's terrible for
that, for the mother to have to experience something like this, the emotional trauma.
But what are some of the other life-threatening medical conditions that women can face if they're having unplanned pregnancies at a young age. You
know, a 15 to 16-year-old girl has gone through puberty, but her body certainly isn't fully
developed. Yeah. Yeah. Well, you know, about a thousand women die every day as a result of their
pregnancy. They die in labor and delivery principally.
And most of the women who die,
they bleed to death,
and those deaths are very preventable.
And younger women are at greater risk.
Women who have child close together
are at greater risk.
Women who have poor nutrition,
so they're iron deficient or have other risks are more greater risk. Women who have poor nutrition, so they're iron deficient or have other
risks are more at risk. Women who have other conditions like malaria or who are HIV positive
are more at risk. The other thing, and I was in Ethiopia recently, and we've worked in Ethiopia
for over 50 years. We set up the first family planning clinic in Ethiopia. I've seen the picture.
It's a little house on a plane, on a dirt plane.
And my colleague, our country director, Dr. Mengistu Asnaki,
and I visited the very famous fistula hospital in Ethiopia.
And the young women there, you know,
have severely disabling lifelong conditions because they weren't able to deliver their babies without pushing so long that sometimes the babies died inside them.
Sometimes they pushed so long that it just injured them in really serious ways.
And of course, younger women are so much more at risk for that because their bodies just
aren't ready to deliver the baby, even though they have a pregnancy.
And many, many women deliver around the world still only with someone at their side whose
experience is having a baby themselves.
They have no training.
So if something happens where it's a challenge, it's a big challenge fast. And, you know, if women
are able to decide that they want to use contraception and then make a choice about
what method of family planning they want, you want, these things can be prevented.
Right.
There's no need for women to go through this terrible experience.
It should be a joyful experience giving birth to a child.
Yeah.
What should be the happiest day in a woman's life
is actually the most dangerous day in her life, the day she gives birth.
So we sort of have a sense of what the problem is and the magnitude.
Some of the things you've said, a thousand women with are trying to innovate out of these problems, I wonder if you have any examplesinder, which is just north of the border with Nigeria.
And then we drove outside Zinder to some rural villages, and we drove over kind of sand roads to get there. And in one of the villages, I met a couple that were a part of a group of young married couples
who have met with Pathfinder peer educators who come from that village.
And one couple was named Adama and Mamadou.
And Mamadou shared with us that his parents had sent him to be married when he was really a child.
He was 15.
To another child, Adama was also 15.
And he said his parents could no longer support him,
provide him with food and lodging.
And in their society, if someone's married,
then they're no longer required to support the child.
So this couple was married very young,
and they had their first child about nine months later. They're a bright, sparkling, energetic couple, Adama and Mamadou,
and yet hadn't had any of the training or education or knowledge
that would help them make a decision
whether they wanted to have a child immediately upon their marriage.
And when I was with them, Adama was holding this beautiful baby, make a decision whether they wanted to have a child immediately upon their marriage.
And when I was with them, Adama was holding this beautiful baby.
And the light that shone in both of their eyes as they shared that based on this work that my Pathfinder colleagues in Niger are doing,
that they now knew that they could decide when they wanted to welcome their second child.
Because they knew a lot of people who had welcomed their second child
in the year, 10 months, 11 months, 12 months after the birth of the first child.
And, you know, to be a 16-year-old with two small children is pretty difficult.
So the sort of sparkle in their eye when they said that they could decide when to welcome
their second child and that they also had received some training to understand what the impact of pregnancy is
and the advantages of spacing a pregnancy a couple years apart
so that a woman has a chance to really recover from the first pregnancy.
And part of what I liked about that was Mama Dew explained that to me, her husband.
Adam's husband explained that to me.
But I think the kind you know, the kind
of cool thing was we asked them, well, what was the biggest thing you learned as a part of this
whole, um, you know, getting to be a part of this, uh, program. And, um, Mama Dew said, well,
we learned how to have difficult conversations about important things. And, was kind of thrilling to me because, you know, that's what
it's about is, you know, how to have a conversation about when do you want to welcome your second
child and to have in that to be able to, you know, talk about the challenges of taking care of a baby
and the challenges of a pregnancy on a woman. know, on a woman. And so it was really exciting. And
they've really stayed with me. You know, as I, as I do my day to day work here at Pathfinder.
I love that the idea of listening to difficult, the idea of learning to have difficult conversations because that's so much a part of
married life but also every aspect of a person's life and if you can bring that reflection and that
capacity to this huge decision about when to have children when to welcome your second child into the world, you can bring that capacity to other facets of your life.
Yeah, absolutely. Because then they talked and I met with, I had a later meeting that same day
that Mama Do was a part of with young husbands. And they talked about their understanding now of, you know, what their wives face in their life.
You know, that a pregnancy, you know, especially in a very young woman, is often pretty hard.
And labor and delivery around giving birth to a child when you're 15 or 16 can often be very
difficult. And that particularly in a setting where the supply of food isn't, you know, great
day to day, and the ability to have a balanced, nutritious diet isn't great. And this is an area
that is really on the forefront.
It's in the Sahel. It is on the forefront of the changing weather patterns that directly affect
food. That, you know, that women can, you know, can really suffer anemia, shortage of iron or
other kinds of deficiencies. And for a husband to be able to understand that and then to say,
you know, I need to, I now know I need to help her more so that she can get some extra rest.
Because oftentimes in this kind of setting, you know, a woman can be the last to eat,
a mother can be the last to eat, her husband will eat first, her children will eat first,
the elders will eat first. And so, but for the husbands to say,
wow, I didn't really appreciate this. This wasn't anything that I was, my father shared with me or
anything. But, you know, the kind of compassion that they had for their wives and the care that
they had for their wives. And, you know, these are really bright, capable people. And like all of us, when that kind of capability is married
with knowledge, you know, it can really lead to some very different outcomes. When we work with
young couples who are 15, 16, the people working with them are young couples who are like 20, 21, who have been identified as leaders, who've been trained,
uh, in, um, in these areas so that they're working with people who identify with them.
They're a little bit older, you know, they've had a little bit wiser, you know, they've had
more training, more life experience. They've, they've, they, they, uh, and,, and they can understand each other.
So that's the model, very community-based.
Right, and you're hearing from people who are essentially your peers,
slightly older, not from somebody who's a significantly different age group,
from a different country, of a different culture.
Right, right. You know, at Pathfinder, we're very community focused. Our colleagues who work
in Zendare or Niamey or any place else in the world understand the local culture,
they understand the history, they understand the language,
because it's their culture, it's their history, it's their language.
Being able to decide when to have children, being able to have access to birth control, also has huge benefits when it comes to economies, innovation.
Obviously, for an individual woman, an individual couple,
having that agency over their lives,
being able to work towards their dreams is incredible.
But the countries and the globe has something to benefit from that as well.
Well, you know, absolutely. You know, we've got a lot of challenges in the world. Some of them are
age old challenges, and some of them are really kind of new. You know, the way the weather's changing is, you know, is really very striking. And the talent and energy
amongst young people globally, and the kind of untapped potential of women everywhere
is really vital to our coming up with the kind of innovation, the kind of creativity
that we need to solve some of these challenges, to make some of the changes that are required for us
all. And for women to be able to have that kind of voice, be able to participate in decision making, be able to come up with new ideas.
You know, women need support and access to family planning services. There's just no question about
that. I guess the other thing I would say, what we've seen in many places where we work is that
if it is conveyed to women that they're important
because they they've had an opportunity to be educated they have um had um the kind of
conversations that that really do offer them the opportunity to to birth control and and in that
context make it powerfully clear that they have they have a lot of value to their family,
their community beyond their fertility, women then step up and are much more likely to give voice the skills to make their point heard or to present kind of something new or novel that they're doing to others.
I wonder how you are navigating some of the culturally complex situations that Pathfinder must find itself in, how you balance the tension between
bringing these ideas about innovation, empowerment for women, with cultures that are,
you know, at different points along the spectrum of accepting these ideas.
We're really delighted. We have a very strong program in Pakistan. Our leader there,
Dr. Tibinda Sarosh, leads a team of colleagues in Pakistan. And one of the areas that we're
working on there is to work with healthcare providers to help them think about the way they approach their work. Because one challenge that can occur is that
a health care provider, let's say a nurse in Pakistan or frankly anywhere else, but we're
doing this key to our work in Pakistan. When a young person comes in and says they'd like
contraception, if that young person is
not married, they can show up with a lot of bias.
A nurse can.
They can say, well, you shouldn't be needing this.
I don't want to give this to you because I don't think you should be needing this.
And if I'm giving to you, I'm supporting you.
Or a young woman who's married can show up and they could say, you shouldn't be needing
this because you
need to demonstrate to your husband and his family that you can have a child. And if you don't do
that, you're not going to be in a good position. You know, your husband could leave you. So I think
I'm looking out for your best interest. So I'm not going to. Or a older woman who's had many
children and doesn't feel very well and doesn't want to have another child may come in and she may say, you know, I just them empathize with the women who are coming in to see them
and help them put themselves in their shoes more, help them see the world from another's eyes and help them really talk about the challenges that the women who are coming to them face.
And what you see, and we also try to understand kind of where that nurse or other medical provider is coming from.
Sometimes it's what his or her own experience has been in their life.
Sometimes it's a particular point of view, religious or philosophical.
Sometimes they're super rushed, and they're completely worn out,
and they don't have time, and they know, unnerved by their work.
And, um, you know, there was one really interesting, uh, nurse who said, um, you know, this, this,
this woman came to me, this young woman who wasn't married, came to me and asked for family planning.
And I said, no, because I didn't think she should be needing it. And the next time I saw her, she was heavily pregnant,
and she died as a result of that pregnancy.
And this nurse said, you know, that was kind of my,
it was my decision that led to that.
And so I think what I love about this work, again, is it's very community focused.
It isn't coming in and saying to nurse, hey, you know, you're wrong, you're wrong, wrong, wrong.
It's understanding that nurse and it's helping that nurse understand others.
And through that, leading to greater openness, greater respect for the concerns that women are bringing in, and real change.
So that's kind of painstaking community-based work, And that's what we do in Pakistan and at Pathfinder.
Well, this is a sobering story to end on, but it's also important to know that there is hope.
And I just want to thank you for sharing your work and also the stories of these incredibly inspiring young people that you and Pathfinder work with.
Well, thank you. It's been a delight. And there is so much hope. All these young women and men,
I think, have within them the ideas and the energy to help move the world forward for all of us. So
let's give them the tools so they can do that.
The Dose is hosted by me, Shana Reservai.
Our sound engineer is Joshua Tallman.
We produced this show for the Commonwealth Fund with editorial support from Barry Scholl
and design support from Jen Wilson.
Special thanks to our team at the Commonwealth Fund.
Our theme music is Arizona Moon by Blue Dot Sessions.
Our website is thedoze.show.
There you'll find show notes and other resources.
That's it for The Doze. Thanks for listening.