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People on this site, know how I feel about the science of population demographics. A new study is trying to deal with the adage: ”The rich get richer and the poor get children.” Another problem, of which we all know is that religion again rears its ugly head in trying to counter the natural order of things.

Fortunately, this adage has been disproven in at least 5 countries where voluntary Family Planning (FP) has been made accessible to all, with little regard to income. Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia and Rwanda were chosen for study because they represent different societies on two different continents. 196 policies affecting the availability of FP services were identified in these countries from 1961 to the present, and the effect was described in a 2024 analysis. The progress in the availability of high-quality FP has been amazing in all five of these countries! Back in the year 2000, few low-income people in Rwanda had access to modern FP. The country was largely Roman Catholic, which forbade modern FP and relied heavily on the unreliable rhythm method for birth spacing. Then, in 2005, the government started supporting a more effective method of natural FP, the Standard Days Method (SDM). It is considered acceptable by the Church and became popular. It is simple and is up to 95% effective—if used properly. Only 5 years after its introduction, the proportion of the poorest couples using effective contraception had risen to half!

The year 2005 also marked a presentation that changed attitudes in the Rwandan Parliament. The RAPID Model is a computer-based tool that stakeholders can use to demonstrate the effect of rapid population growth on different sectors, and the benefits of FP programs. The model demonstrated how FP can reduce mortality, improve health and increase the availability of women in the workforce. Rwanda has taken advantage of that benefit: almost 2/3 of Members of Parliament are women—the highest percentage of any country! RAPID also showed the economic benefits of FP—for every dollar spent on contraception, the government would save four. To quote a minister of health, “family planning is a tool of development.”

Since the five countries have different conditions and customs, each approached the need to slow population growth with different policies. For instance, the literacy rate is low in rural Egypt, so they used TV to get across FP messages. Ethiopia established primary health care for all—including contraception. Brazil focused on preventing adolescent pregnancies by improving sexuality education and facilitating access to FP for teens. In 2008 a change in Ecuador’s constitution named health care as a right, and ensured that women could make their own decisions about FP. Rwandan policies have already been discussed. It is remarkable that all 5 countries established policies that increased use of effective FP—and in 3 of the countries, there is equity between rich and poor in their use of FP.

Although each of these countries has its own policies and areas of focus, they all received help from the US government and from other rich countries. Nongovernmental agencies, such as the Gates Foundation, also provided expertise and resources. It is wonderful that all 5 of these countries did what they could to make family planning services available to all.

© Richard Grossman MD, 2024
Richard Grossman is a retired obstetrician-gynecologist. He writes a monthly essay on human population at: www.population-matters.org.
[overpopulation-project.com]

pedigojr 7 Oct 3
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2 comments

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1

Actually, a recent asshole Repub governor of my state, was quoted in the newspaper, saying " The rich get richer, and the poor have children"....

That is an old adage and was in the report. Unfortunately, it has shown to be mostly true. When people are poor they think children bring them wealth and it has been proven that many poor people have more kids as it might increase their chances that one kid will make it and provide for the family. During the world-wide depression one of the only countries to lower their fertility rate was the US. In most other countries the rate went up.

4

What do you call a woman who uses the rhythm method?

Mother.

The Catholic Church is a little behind the times...anywhere from a few years to a millennium, depending on the issue.

And yet they are far ahead of the Evangelicals and other fundamentalist sects!

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