HomeLocal NewsFamily Planning: Nigeria has 15.1% unmet need – UNFPA

Family Planning: Nigeria has 15.1% unmet need – UNFPA

Date:

Related stories

Plastic pollution endangers children, UNICEF warns

Rahama Rihod Muhammad Farah, Chief of UNICEF Kano Field...

TikToker remanded over cross-dressing, indecent content in Kano

A popular TikTok content creator, Abubakar Kilina, has been...

Sen Barau donates N22m to bereaved families of Kano athletes

Deputy Senate President, Senator Barau Jibrin, has donated a...

Emir Ado Bayero suspends Sallah procession over security concerns in Kano

The Kano Emirate under the Nassarawa royal house, led...

Kano govt warns residents of dangerous air pollution

The Kano State Government has raised an alarm over...
spot_img

Ms Ulla Mueller, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Country Representative in Nigeria, says the country has 15.1 per cent unmet need for family planning.

Mueller disclosed this in Abuja at NAN Forum, the flagship interview programme of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

According to her, 15.1 per cent of Nigerian women and girls who want Family Planning services do not have access to it due to many reasons.

“We have an unmet need in Nigeria which is 15.1 per cent. That basically means that 15.1 per cent of women between 15 and 40 want to access contraception, but are denied access.

”In numbers, that is about four million women who want it right now as you and I sit, want to access contraception and have no access,” she said.

Mueller said UNFPA needed to work more in partnership with development partners in ensuring commodity security.

According to her, a national commodity basket is being supported by UNFPA with focus on ensuring availability.

She added that the emphasis is in making sure the supply chain works using the short term or long term methods.

” That is one of the most critical things that needs to be available for women.

“So if they access services, they can actually get the method of choice. We are also working to build capacity of healthcare workers,” she said.

She also said Nigeria’s Modern Contraceptive Prevalence Rate (MCPR) and Traditional Contraceptives Prevalence Rate (TCPR), which stood at 12 per cent and 17 per cent respectively, were very low and a major concern to UNFPA.

Mueller, who called for advocacy for more women’s access to family planning commodity basket, however, congratulated many of the states on their access.

‘We also have more and more states now using the basket. so I think some of the achievements is really the FP 20 commitment.

“It is really accessibility, availability and informing women that they have a right to choice,” she said. (NAN)

Subscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here