Noy irked by slow debates on RH bill

MANILA, Philippines - President Aquino is already getting impatient for the passage of the Reproductive Health (RH) bill in Congress, Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said yesterday. Belmonte said Aquino asked about the status of House Bill 4244, also known as the Responsible Parenthood, Reproductive Health and Population and Development Act of 2011, when they met at the criminal justice summit on Monday. Belmonte told the President that the House of Representatives was aiming to put the measure to a vote before the end of the year but “there are still a lot of people wanting to ask questions (on the floor).”                        

The measure has been filed, refiled and debated on in Congress for the past 12 years. 

“But with three days to go (before Congress goes on a break) and so many people still lined up there (to interpellate) I know it’s not going to be possible,” Belmonte said.

(Source: )

Lagman: Claim of anti-RH lobby an old tale

Minority Leader Edcel Lagman has dismissed as an “old yarn” the claim of Cebu Representative Pablo Garcia that  the passage of the reproductive health bill in Congress was being bankrolled with a P20 million to P50 million lobby fund from Washington.

“This is a dead and fossilized tirade which anti-RH solons like Cebu Representative Pablo Garcia try to resurrect every time the RH bill is on the threshold of approval. Allegation is not proof. Garcia has consistently failed to prove his bare allegations,” said Lagman,  the main author of the bill.

Garcia claimed in a  privilege speech that pro-RH bill advocates were being manipulated by a foreign power.

But Lagman said that Garcia’s accusation was meant to “bait RH advocates into protracted and repetitive debates in order to further delay the passage of the RH bill, but there were no takers because the ploy of Garcia was too obvious and crude.”

Lagman charged Garcia with being “myopic” to a well-oiled lobby opposing the RH bill that is funded by the “wealthy Catholic hierarchy,” as he stressed that pro-RH advocates were “nationalist legislators who would not take a cent from foreign lobbyists.”

He noted that Garcia had consistently opposed, and often lost, progressive legislation such as the comprehensive agrarian reform program and the abolition of the death penalty.

Lagman also defended the  Philippine Legislators Committee on Population and Development (PLCPD)  which Garcia said was the de facto House committee steering the debates on the RH bill.

(Source: newsinfo.inquirer.net)

Miriam asks students: Who isn’t interested in sex?

“Sino sa inyo ang interesado sa sex?” Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago asked a crowd of college students at the Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Muntinlupa on Friday.

No one raised a hand, but there were murmurs.

“Kung hindi ka interesado, magpagamot ka. Abnormal ‘yan,” the senator said.

The audience burst into applause and laughter.

Santiago was the keynote speaker at a forum on the reproductive health (RH) bill organized by the Student Council Alliance of the Philippines, The Forum for Family Planning and Development, and the university’s Political Science Society.

While tackling serious issues such as the need to educate the poor and the youth about their reproductive health rights, Santiago grabbed the attention of her audience of young people with her punchlines.

Even as she pointed out that sex is not bad, Santiago told them that education should be their priority.

“Sex will come, too. Preferably married sex.”

“Pero kung hindi mo na talaga mapigilan,” she added, “puwede ba, mag-condom ka na lang?”

RH bill haters might be using contraceptives

Santiago stressed in her speech that the bill does not promote promiscuity and abortion, but instead seeks to give women access to safe family planning methods, and inform the youth about the dangers of unprotected sex.

She also debunked views that giving the youth sex education, which the bill provides for, would make them promiscuous.

On the contrary, she said studies have proven that giving the youth enough information would help them avoid pre-marital and unprotected sex.

“Mali ‘yong iniisip natin na magtatakbuhan sila sa ilalim ng acacia at magse-sex silang lahat,” Santiago said.

Santiago also hit the RH bill’s opponents as “intransigent, stubborn, and stupid.”

She said some of them may even be using contraceptives.

“I will inspect the bedroom of these rich people, and see what methods of contraception they are using. And I will accuse them of hypocrisy in front of the Filipino people,” Santiago said.

She also bared a plan for the bill’s critics in Congress.

“Hahanapin ko ang mga magulang nila at bibigyan ko ng emergency contraceptives para hindi na makapanganak ng mga kamukha nila,” Santiago said.

She added that the Catholic Church must not not block the bill’s passage on religious grounds, saying the Bible should not be interpreted literally.

Even the Church, Santiago said, wants people to follow their conscience and not obey its orders blindly.

“Ang pari kamukha lang natin. Tao lang siya, gago rin siya kung hindi siya marunong. Not necessarily tama ang pinagsasasabi nila,” she said.

No vote for anti-RH pols

Santiago is determined to put the controversial measure to a vote in the Senate at the soonest possible time. It is currently in the period of interpellation.

She said she and her co-sponsor, health and demography committee chair Pia Cayetano, will file a motion asking that the interpellation period be stopped so that voting on the bill can begin within this year.

However, the bill’s opponents, including Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, had said they still have many questions to ask regarding the bill and that interpellations would resume next year.

Meanwhile, some student leaders vowed not to vote for anti-RH lawmakers who will run in the 2013 elections, and said they will convince other youths to do so.

“Handa kami na magkampanya laban sa mga lehislador na ito kung tatakbo man sila sa 2013,” said JC Tejano, national spokesperson of the Student Council Alliance of the Philippines, which has chapters in 30 cities. “We are ready to launch an anti-anti-RH campaign.”

Tejano said it’s already futile to convince anti-RH lawmakers to vote for the bill because its proponents have already explained all its features satisfactorily and even repetitively.

He said they will portray anti-RH bill lawmakers as enemies of the youth.

(Source: abs-cbnnews.com)

Dying in silence: How abortion kills Filipino mothers

That it’s illegal exacerbates the situation, say experts

MANILA, Philippines –Amelia, 35, was sure she was dying. She was lying in bed in the emergency room of a busy hospital in Manila. Her dress was drenched in blood. Her stomach was in terrible pain.

Patients recuperate from post-abortion complications at the Fabella Memorial Hospital (Photo taken by Elena Masilungan for Newsbreak)

Patients recuperate from post-abortion complications at the Fabella Memorial Hospital (Photo taken by Elena Masilungan for Newsbreak)

It happened almost a year ago. Her husband brought her to the hospital because she had been bleeding for three days. It got to a point when she had to change her sanitary pad every 30 minutes. Paracetamol only made the pain in her stomach worse. “I was so weak I could not even sit up. I got scared and went to the hospital.”

Amelia was suffering from complications due to induced abortion.

When she found out she was pregnant, she began seeing the hilot in their neighborhood thrice a week for three weeks for “massage” sessions. The hilot kneaded, poked and pressed her stomach for 10 to 15 minutes during these sessions. On the fourth week of her “massage” sessions, she started bleeding.

It was painful. It was also a crime.

A street vendor whose husband ekes out a living as a “pedicab” driver, Amelia considered her pregnancy as just another expense, “gastos lang.”

The country’s penal code, enacted 8 decades ago, punishes with imprisonment women who undergo abortion.

Amelia’s case is by no means unique. A study done by the Guttmacher Institute said that in 2008 alone, 560,000 induced abortions were performed in the Philippines.

Amelia took the risk because she and her husband could no longer afford another—their 9th, supposedly—child to feed. A street vendor whose husband ekes out a living as a “pedicab” driver, Amelia considered her pregnancy as just another expense, “gastos lang.”

During an interview in their one-room shanty in Manila, Amelia was putting to sleep her one-year-old infant. Her two eldest children were not home, but neither were they in school. Her nine-year-old son was working as an errand boy in a nearby restaurant, while her 10-year-old was busy manning a car park by the streets.

Only her seven-year-old daughter was in school. The four other kids were with Amelia’s mother, since Amelia had to work.

Unsafe methods

Because abortion is illegal here, women like Amelia are forced to go to clandestine abortion service providers who use unsafe methods, at great risk to their health and their lives.

The consequences of such procedures can be fatal.

In 2008 alone, 1,000 women died from complications arising from unsafe abortion, according to according to a study made by the Guttmacher Institute. Almost every year, unsafe abortion takes more lives than the dreaded dengue fever, which caused a little over 700 deaths last year.

It is among the top five reasons why the number of mothers dying from pregnancy continues to be fairly high in the Philippines, according to data from the health department.

Making things worse is the attitude of many health professionals toward women who choose to abort their pregnancy. Apart from harboring their own moral judgments, these health practitioners hesitate to treat post-abortion patients for fear of criminal liability.

Amelia was lucky. Timely medical attention helped her survive.

In many cases, the women die because whenthey suffer from post-abortion complications they delay going to the hospital for treatment.

In an overwhelmingly Catholic country where the Church remains an influential voice, terminating a pregnancy is generally equated with murder. There is very little sympathy for women who opt for it.

Women suspected of having induced abortions often receive unsympathetic treatment if not outright threats from medical professionals. The moral judgment made by medical professionals can be so sweeping at times that even those who had spontaneous abortion are initially suspected of undergoing induced abortion.

Almost every year, unsafe abortion takes more lives than the dreaded dengue fever, which caused a little over 700 deaths last year.

As such, they are subjected to the same unsympathetic treatment, until such time that a final diagnosis is made that indicates they had, indeed, suffered from spontaneous abortion.

That’s what you get

Amelia felt the censure almost immediately upon entering the hospital’s emergency room.

It was her husband who explained Amelia’s condition to the nurse at the reception desk. The nurse glared at her for a few seconds, Amelia recalled.  She then left and came back minutes later with a doctor who asked Amelia where she was hurting and what she was feeling.

“After answering him, he next asked me in a loud voice if I had an abortion,” Amelia said. “There were people near us who heard him and they all looked at me.” She felt the judgment in their eyes. “They seemed to be saying, ‘that’s what you get for getting an abortion,’” Amelia related in almost a whisper.

Amelia did not answer the doctor directly.  She told him was that she had a miscarriage (“nakunan”), or a spontaneous abortion, which happens without medical or surgical interventions. The doctor looked at her and shook his head but said nothing more.

In countries where it is legal, abortion is done through surgery or medication. In the Philippines, women wanting to terminate their pregnancies do it through such means such as an abdominal massage, by inserting hazardous objects in the uterus, by ingesting abortifacient drugs or substances, or even simply by doing intense physical exertion.

Asked why she lied, Amelia explained, “I did not want to admit to the doctor I had an abortion. I don’t think any woman can readily admit that. How can a mother admit to another person that she killed her child?”

After the doctor left her, a nurse sat Amelia in a wheelchair and led her to the obstetric ward. The nurse told her in a sharp tone, “Don’t lie when she asks you if you had an abortion. If you lie, we will report you to the police. Besides, it’s obvious you had one.”

Amelia was burdened with mixed feelings. “I was so scared I might die or if I live, they will get the police to arrest me.” She was also getting furious. “I was bleeding heavily. I could feel the blood trickling down my legs. My dress was also soaked in blood,” she narrated. “I knew they were deliberately delaying treating me because I had an abortion.”

“I kept thinking of my children. The eldest was just 10 years old. What will happen to them if I die?”

Meantime, the pain kept getting worse. “I kept thinking of my children. The eldest was just 10 years old. What will happen to them if I die?,” she said.

Amelia had reason to be angry.

“I have witnessed many times how the health staff can be very judgmental in dealing with post-abortion patients,” observes an OB-Gyne doctor, who agreed to talk only on condition of anonymity.

Guilty feelings

The doctor, who is a consultant with the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital, the largest maternity hospital in Metro Manila, admitted that it is very common to hear “self-righteous remarks” from health professionals when they talk to post-abortion patients. “They make the patients feel guilty for their ‘crime.’”

Anti-RH bill advocates sign up onlookers to pray the rosary for the conversion of those involved in seeking or providing abortion"

Anti-RH bill advocates sign up onlookers to pray the rosary “for the conversion of those involved in seeking or providing abortion” (Photo taken by Elena Masilungan for Newsbreak)

Dr. Alejandro San Pedro, chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Bulacan Provincial Hospital, agreed that such situations do happen. “The influence of the Catholic Church is deeply ingrained in some doctors that it affects the way they behave toward their patients,” he said.

The code of ethics of the Philippine Medical Association (PMA) is clear on what it expects from doctors: to provide competent medical care with full professional skill in accordance with current standards of care, compassion, independence, and respect for human dignity.

But in reality, many doctors do not meet this expectation when it comes to dealing with post-abortion patients.

Flora, a 23-year old single mother of three, experienced this when she sought treatment in a private tertiary hospital for high fever, severe stomach cramps, and heavy bleeding after ingesting the drug misoprostol, a drug known for its abortifacient qualities.

“The scolding came first before the treatment,” relates Flora. “The doctor reprimanded me and told me I committed a grave sin. She told me, ‘You may still be alive but your soul is already burning in hell.’”

All Flora could do at the time was cry.

Some doctors admitted threatening their patients that they will be reported to the police just to stop them from lying or from being evasive about their true situation.

Some doctors we interviewed explained that they resent having to spend crucial time on a patient who is lying about her condition. “Admittedly, you can get impatient,” said Merlinda Montinola, chief resident of the OB-Gyne department of the Philippine General Hospital.

It is frustrating when a patient keeps on denying that she had an abortion when all her symptoms point to that, Montinola said. “You would want to know what she did because the treatment for induced abortion is different from spontaneous abortion.” When no amount of explanation would make the patient tell the truth, Montinola said, “you cannot help but sound irritable and unsympathetic.”

This mood can be aggravated when the doctor is overworked and very tired, she added.

Some doctors admittedthreatening their patients that they will be reported to the police just to stop them from lying or from being evasive about their true situation. They clarified, however, that these are often empty threats— meant only to make the patient realize that what she did was illegal and risky.

Hopefully, these doctors said, the patient will be frightened enough and avoid a repeat in the future.

Legal and moral bind

There are doctors who feel they are in a bind when treating post-abortion patients because of the legal responsibility attached to induced abortion.

“Some doctors think that completing an induced abortion and providing post-abortion care mean they are continuing the crime,” according to Junice Melgar, executive director of the Likhaan Center for Women’s Health.  The center is a nongovernment organization that promotes the health and rights of disadvantaged women and their communities.

Melgar maintained that these fears are baseless. “The crime has been done already. And doctors are supposed to do their ethical role, which is to treat life-threatening complications.”

The specter of potential criminal liability, however, clearly affects the way health professionals and institutions deal with post-abortion cases.

In a forum on post-abortion care attended by health professionals, the assistant chair of the OB-Gyne department of a tertiary teaching hospital in Metro Manila revealed that they would direct their security guards to have the names of post-abortion patients listed in the police blotter.

The administration of the hospital, which is right across from a police station, was under the impression that they are required to do this. Curiously, no police ever came to the hospital to investigate.

Lawyer Claire Padilla, executive director of the NGO EngendeRights, who was in the same forum, asserted that the law is not categorical in requiring doctors and hospitals to report to authorities women who had induced abortion. This should explain the police’s lack of action against post-abortion patients in the said hospital.

“The crime has been done already. And doctors are supposed to do their ethical role, which is to treat life-threatening complications.”

There are doctors as well who refuse to treat post-abortion patients because to do so would be against the dictates of their conscience.

Doctors who admitted they turned away patients in the past told Newsbreak that they referred the cases to other doctors who were less conflicted. Likewise, in situations when they are the only ones available, these doctors said they eventually provide their patients with competent medical care.

In such situations when they are forced by circumstances to attend to post-abortion patients, however, the behavior and attitude of these doctors toward such patients sometimes go against the PMA code.

Training for doctors

Hospitals generally have an accountability mechanism that allows patients to complain if they experienced less than professional behaviors from their staff, including doctors and nurses. It is, in fact, a requirement for PhilHealth accreditation.

Most post-abortion patients, however, ignore these violations of their rights and prefer to suffer in silence.

Dr. San Pedro said training is crucial in changing the way medical professionals perceive women who undergo abortion. “Medical professionals must learn how to respect women and their reproductive rights. Our training when it comes to post-abortion care and treatment is heavy on the biomedical aspect. It’s time to devote as much emphasis on the ethical values of medical professionals in responding to the needs of post-abortion patients,” he explained.

One hospital, the Brokenshires Integrated Health Ministries in Davao City, has been doing this for some time now through its Woman Center. This health institution is managed by the United Church of Christ, a Protestant group.

Brokenshires’ Woman Center conducts regular training for residents, nurses and midwives on ethics and quality of care. The training has a specific section for post-abortion care that incorporates not just clinical discussions of cases but also the ethical practices involved.

“We recognize that even if our personal belief is against abortion, it is not right to reflect this in our attitude toward our patients,” said Dr. Darlene Estuart, project director of the center.

Estuart sees the value of exposing residents to nonclinical work and having them interact with poor women, abused women, and women in prostitution, who comprise a significant number of post-abortion patients.

“By experiencing this, they’ll know first hand these women’s daily struggle and the ordeals they have to go through in life. Hopefully, when someone like them becomes their patient, they’ll be less judgmental, more compassionate, and more respectful to them,” she explained. (Next: Desperate women seek desperate measures)–Newsbreak

The series was produced under theMaggie de Pano Fund for Investigative Reporting on Health.The Fund, which is managed by Newsbreak, ismade possible through a grant from Macare Medicals, Inc.

Hontiveros defends RH Bill, cites benefits

THE advocacy campaign for the passage of the Reproductive Health (RH) Bill continues in Cebu despite minimal support from local legislators and church leaders.

Akbayan Party-list spokesperson Risa Hontiveros said the approval of the RH Bill would mean a marked reduction in abortion cases, fewer deaths of women caused by complications related to pregnancy, and improved health services.

“The RH Bill is pro-choice, pro-life and pro-chance,” Hontiveros told students of Cebu Technological University (CTU).

“Women should be able to make their own decisions. Health conditions have to be improved,” said Hontiveros, a former represantive of the party-list group.

She underscored that the benefits enumerated in the proposal include additional funds for public health services.

Population control?

Hontiveros also said the bill does not promote population control but population management, wherein families are expected to be educated in terms of health, education and employment issues.

The core elements of the proposal include creating a comprehensive policy and the establishment of an age-appropriate adolescent sexual education.

Leaders of the Catholic Church have opposed RH bills for years because of provisions that counter basic teachings.

They are against the Responsible Parenthood, Reproductive Health and Population and Development Act of 2011, particularly the provisions on adolescent reproductive health education, the use of artificial contraceptives and the penalty clause of imprisonment and fines.

‘Poison’ In a separate interview, anti-RH advocate Dr. Rene Bullecer said women, mothers and children need “augmented facilities and supplies for health and not poisons like oral contraceptives.”

“(I) Hope Akbayan and other pro-death party-lists supporting RH will stop lying to millions of our dear Filipina women on the pro-death and anti-women provisions of the RH bill,” he added.

Bullecer, Human Life International country director, also said the additional funds for health services are welcome.

But he said that from the current P700-million budget for population management, the allotment is expected to skyrocket to over P6 billion.

“That’s a lot of money and a good source of corruption later on,” he said.

Published in the Sun.Star Cebu newspaper on November 26, 2011.

(Source: sunstar.com.ph)

jimparedes:

An honest reaction from a priest.. How refreshing!

Commentary: ‘For he is our peace’ (Eph. 2:14)

By John J. Carroll, S.J.
Philippine Daily Inquirer

Posted date: May 04, 2011


AS I watched Christ’s faithful gather symbolically in the Upper Room on Holy Thursday, around Calvary’s cross on…

246 notes

Vote For RH!

There is no idea as powerful as an idea whose time has come.

We should urge Congress that in both chambers, the debates should conclude and legislators should come to a vote, in order that this recurrent issue can stop hogging the national agenda every time a new Congress is convened. Let the Filipino people know the principled stand of every legislator, so that in the coming 2013 elections, the electorate, in whom reposes the sovereign might of the state, will know whom to reward and whom to punish. -Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago

Ehough with debates! Vote NOW!

Will Philippine Women Continue to Die During Childbirth?

Every year almost 500,000 lives are lost around the world due to maternity-related causes, 99% of these deaths occur in developing countries and almost all of them are preventable. In the Philippines, more than 10 mothers die everyday leaving more than 30 children motherless. In effort to reduce this burden, Target 6 of MDG 5 envisions the reduction of maternal mortality ratio (MMR) by 75% between 1990 and 2015 while also including universal access to reproductive health services. This target was in line in the program of action of the ICPD (International Conference on Population and Development) with President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, along with other world leaders, reaffirming this commitment at the 2005 World Summit in New York.

As MMR in the Philippines was 209 in the early 90s, the target MMR for 2015 has been set at 52. In 1998 MMR fell from 209 to 172 but seems to have plateaued thereafter stagnating at 162 in 2006. At this pace of reduction, by 2015 MMR will have only declined to 140 and the target of 52 will be unachievable. 


Reduction in MMR, while a multifaceted and difficult goal, has been successfully achieved in several countries (Thailand, Malaysia and Sri Lanka). In most developing countries, the causes of maternal mortality are similar. Direct causes such as hemorrhage, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, unsafe abortion, obstructed labor, etc. constitute the majority of obstetric complications resulting in fatalities. In the Philippines, while 40% of maternal deaths are unclassified, it is clear that hypertension (27%), hemorrhage (18%) and unsafe abortion (11%) are the three major causes of maternal mortality.5 All of these problems are preventable and can be addressed through adequate medical care such as the presence of skilled birth attendants, emergency obstetric care (EmOC), when necessary, and access to family planning services.

In the Philippines, almost 4,600 women die giving birth each year.“No woman should die giving life” – Thoraya Ahmed Obaid,UNFPA Executive Director As a measure to accelerate efforts on MMR reduction, the government has adopted Women’s Health and Safe Motherhood as its flagship program under the sector-wide Fourmula One (F1) with the help of other stakeholders such as the World Bank, ADB, EU/GTZ, JICA, USAID, WHO, UNICEF and UNFPA. In order to address maternal and newborn mortality, it has been agreed that a 3- pronged strategy be adopted, namely: skilled attendants at birth; EmOC referral system(Basic EmOC and Comprehensive EmOC); and reproductive health/FP services (informed choices). Advocacy, community involvement, male participation, and empowerment of women play a major role.



High MMR disparities between the rich and poor are reflected through important indicators such as the presence of skilled professionals at birth, availability of caesarian section (comprehensive EmOC), increased contraceptive prevalence rate, and teenage pregnancy. The poor marry earlier, have more children and less access to RH leading them further into poverty. 

Comparison of RH Indicators by Wealth Index

Wealth Index
Quintile
Percentage of delivery
by Skilled Health
Professionals 
Caesarian
Section
Rate
Total
Fertility
Rate
Unmet Need for
Family
planning10
Age specific
Fertility Rate
(15-19)

Rich

92
20
2
13
5

Poor

25
2
6
20
9



Poverty, remote location and lack of education exaggerate the three delays associated with saving a woman’s life: the decision when to seek care (knowledge on danger signs, empowered decision making), reaching the health/EmOC facility (expenses especially for communication/transportation, clinic or hospital services are a concern), and receiving appropriate care in the facility (availability of gender and culture-sensitive doctors/health staff, adequate drugs, supplies, blood and equipment, etc.).

Six out of ten births in the Philippines take place at home making it crucial to follow a woman from prenatal to postnatal stage. In Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), nine out of ten births take place at home and together with Caraga and other Mindanao regions, MMR is twice as high than the national average. However, it has been globally proven that Traditional Birth Attendants (hilots) alone do not contribute to reduction of maternal mortality. It is thus critical that trained health professionals are given necessary competencies in home delivery including neonatal care until an adequate number of institutions/ birthing clinics are developed to care for poor mothers in rural and hard to reach areas. Instituting one midwife per barangay would be a positive development, however this may not be attainable in the near future. Hence alternate strategies of tapping existing health professionals could be considered as an initial step.

The MDGs, particularly the eradication of poverty and hunger, cannot be achieved if questions of population and reproductive health are not squarely addressed. And that means stronger efforts to promote women’s rights, and greater investment in education and health, including reproductive health and family planning.” —Former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan As a new paradigm, each pregnancy should be considered at risk and with large numbers of trained health professionals leaving the country, the problem of availability of doctors, nurses and midwives who provide emergency obstetric and newborn care is becoming critical. It is estimated that in 2006 alone, more than 171 medical doctors, 13,977 nurses, 385 midwives and 14,412 caregivers left for overseas work. 



Couples have the right to information and access to the right contraceptive method at the right time and at the right place. Furthermore, it is estimated that there are 3.1 million pregnancies in the Philippines every year, half of which are unplanned, with one third ending in abortions. UNFPA does not support abortion being used as a family planning method. Rather, UNFPA promotes planned families. It has been realized that through appropriate family planning, MMR could fall by almost 30%. In the Philippines, four babies are born every minute, exerting pressure on the country’s resources to support these children and plan for their future. None of the MDGs can be achieved if we do not address the
issues of population squarely.