Photo: Jason Gutierrez/IRIN. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila
MANILA, 2 July 2012 (IRIN) - The government of the Philippines is aiming
to save its “failed” national family planning programme and drastically
cut maternal deaths by spending 500 million pesos (almost US$12
million) on contraceptives in 2012, a move bitterly opposed by the
influential Roman Catholic Church.
The Department of Health has said it will use the money to purchase
"family planning commodities and supplies” - an official euphemism for
condoms, intra-uterine devices (IUDs), birth control pills and other
contraceptives - and distribute them on a large scale for the first time
in largely underfunded community centres across the country.
It is a controversial decision that even public health officials and
family planning advocates admit may not be carried out by local
officials wary of angering the Church or losing the votes of Catholic
supporters.
The Church frowns on contraceptives and discourages Filipinos from using
them, so government support for family planning programmes has usually
been limited. Earlier attempts to boost family planning services failed
when strict congressional vetting scrapped any programme that involved
paying for and distributing contraceptives.
The money for the new family planning initiative will have to come from
2012 general budget allocations of $990 million. Health department
officials say the move is aimed at cutting maternal mortality rates,
which went from just 162 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2006 to 221
in 2011 - a rise of 35 percent - according to the government’s 2011
Family Health Survey.
Health officials say at this pace the Philippines will likely miss the
UN Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of reducing the 1990 maternal
mortality ratio (MMR) by three-quarters by 2015.
"The Philippines started its family planning programme in the 1970s,
when we had a similar population to Thailand of around 40 million. But
now our population is roughly 95 million, while Thailand only has 65
million,” said Esmeraldo Ilem, head of the Jose Fabella Memorial
Hospital, the national maternity facility in the capital, Manila.
“This difference… is attributed to Thailand's very successful [family
planning] programme," he said. "In other words, ours has been
unsuccessful." The hospital’s dark hallways and perpetually overcrowded
maternity wards could symbolize the country's inadequate health sector
management.
A reproductive health bill that includes allocating funds for
contraceptives and introducing sex education for primary school children
has been bitterly debated in Congress for the past two years, but there
is little sign of it being passed anytime soon.
Foreign governments and NGOs have so far filled the gap, but the global
financial crisis and changing geopolitical priorities have forced them
to cut back on aid, say Philippine government officials. In 2005 donors
provided $4.4 million for contraceptives, with the US government
contributing most of the money, according to the public-private Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition, which tracks shipments of reproductive health supplies.
Funding for contraception was half that amount in 2011. The
International Planned Parenthood Federation, Marie Stopes International -
a global reproductive health NGO - and the UN Population Fund (UNFPA)
together provided $2.2 million for contraceptives, with $836,000 coming
from UNFPA.
As a result, some six million Filipina women reported an "unmet need"
for modern family planning services, according to the health department.
"These are women who are too old or too young to give birth, or those
who already have too many [children], yet still come here and bear
babies because they do not have proper access to health services,” Ilem
said as he made the rounds in Fabella's crowded wards.
The city government of Manila hosts the national headquarters of the
Catholic Church in a country where more than 80 percent of the people
identify themselves as members.
"In Manila, there is no health centre where you can find free
contraceptives." The city banned contraceptives in government health
centres about a decade ago.
President Benigno Aquino, elected in 2010 on a promise to end poverty, initially voiced support for the reproductive health bill, but intense lobbying by Church officials, whose views on key issues often shape public opinion, has softened that position.
"We will not meet the MDG [Millennium Development Goal] on maternal
health," Ilem said. "But at the very least the purpose of this spending
is to help save our family planning programme by… mak[ing]
contraceptives available to the public."
The statistics and acronyms mean little to women like Irish Gili, 31, a
mother of eight who had just delivered her latest baby at Fabella. She
has never had access to family planning advice, much less free
contraceptives. She nearly died while delivering her seventh child, but
found herself pregnant again, barely a month after giving birth.
"I have been advised to have a [tubal] ligation already," she said. "I
suppose I need to that now. I have so many mouths to feed, and my body
can no longer handle another childbirth."