With over 77% of Uganda’s population below 30 years, Uganda has the third youngest population globally. For such a population, and a fertility rate of 7.3, sexual and reproductive health services come in handy.
Reproductive Health Uganda
(RHU) a non-government organization affiliated to the International Planned Parenthood Federation is
one of the entities promoting and providing sexual and reproductive health and
rights services through clinic spread across the country. This exercise took us to Katego clinic, which
also hosts RHUs head office in Kamwokya, a suburb of Kampala.
Walking through the facility creates an impression of a busy
center addressing key health challenges for the country. On the walls, a list
of services provided is pasted to guide clients on the services and the costs
involved. Did you for instance know that
you can have vasectomy at 40.000 shillings? This is just an equivalent of
USD14. This is just one of the services
you can get just by walking through the clinic.
Others are provision of contraceptives for prevention of
unwanted pregnancies, management of sexually transmitted infections, Post
Abortion Care, Breast and Cervical Cancer screening, Condom distribution, counseling
and laboratory services.
The center is serving up to 2,000,000 clients annually, most of whom seek family planning services. Jackson Chekweko, the Executive Director at Reproductive Health Uganda told us in an interview that the need is enormous especially among adolescents, a problem he says is a result of policy challenges “The Biggest thing the government would do is to open up the Health Policy to allow young people to get comprehensive sex education.”
Like several countries in sub Saharan Africa, Uganda faces a
huge burden of striving to cope with the ever increasing SRHR needs of the
population. The country is challenged with high teenage and unintended
pregnancy, a poor referral system, a high number of school drop outs, high
STI/STD infection rate, child marriage and high maternal mortality.
Today at least 67 percent of Ugandan women have their first
child before their 20th birthday. Women in this bracket are twice as
likely to die from child bearing, according to James Tumusiime, the Gender and
Youth Officer at RHU.
This is witnessed in the absence of a unified effort to
create a conducive environment for family planning in Uganda, the 2014 annual
report by RHU indicates. This includes increasing the number of service
delivery points, updating service provider skills in terms of counselling and
contraceptive technology, encouraging couples to space births and encouraging
youths to delay first pregnancy.
Nevertheless, the number of people accessing family planning
services at the facility increased from 279,642 in 2010 to 809,521 in 2014.
Increases have also been seen in services related to post abortion care,
HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections over the last four years.
This indicator implies that non
government organisations like RHU have improved access to services for the
diverse population and social groups spread out in 18 districts in underserved
areas across the country. These services
are delivered through clinics, outreaches and Community Resource Persons
including Peer Educators, Village Health Teams (VHTs) and Community Based
Reproductive Health agents.

The educators have also
implemented economic empowerment as a strategy, enabling the youths to gain
financial access, control and economic security. Economic empowerment has
facilitated the youths to negotiate for safe sex and adopt behavior and social
positions that have helped them to maintain positive sexual reproductive health
principles.
“The
Capacity and ability to have our own financial resources and control them
reduced on our chances of engaging in unsafe sexual behaviors such as
transactional sex, coerced sex, accepting our partners multiple concurrent
sexual partnerships and tolerating violence,” one SRH services beneficiary said
in a report.
But this success story is threatened by an increase in the
number of cases of maternal and infant mortality.
Maternal morbidity and mortality relate to illness or death occurring
during pregnancy or childbirth, or within two months of the birth or
termination of a pregnancy. For every maternal death in Uganda, at least six
survive with chronic and debilitating ill health.
Although there have been a number of government policy
interventions aimed at improving access and quality of maternal services, the
problem persists with an estimated 6000woemn dying annually due to pregnancy
related causes. This is an average of 16 women per day.
Most of these maternal deaths are due to causes directly
related to pregnancy and childbirth unsafe abortion and obstetric complications
such as severe bleeding, infection, hypertensive disorders, and obstructed
labors. Others are due to causes such as
malaria, diabetes, hepatitis, and anaemia, which are aggravated by pregnancy.
Health systems challenges and poor social determinants of health
slow the improvement of women’s and children’s health. Difficult access to quality
services, a shortage of trained and motivated health care professionals and shortages
of essential drugs and medicines contribute to high mortality and morbidity
rates.
According to the World Health Organisation, although approximately
94% of women giving birth in Uganda receive some antenatal care by a healthcare
professional (doctors, nurses and midwives), in rural areas, only 36% of women
deliver in a health facility compared to 79% in urban areas. Women in the
highest wealth quintile were 3 times more likely to deliver in a health facility
than women in the lowest wealth quintile.
Organisations like RHU are playing a great role in extending
services closer to the people.
Parliaments are however fundamental to the development of issues
and critical to improving the health of women and children. They have a crucial role to play on Maternal
Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) issues within the broader context of the health
sector and the overall national development agenda.
The work of parliamentarians can help to:
·
Ensure necessary resources are allocated to the
health sector.
·
·
Enhance
legal frameworks to address gender inequality and promote reproductive rights.
·
·
Improve access
to quality care and medicines among poor and marginalized populations.
·
·
Expand
maternity protection for working women
·
Construct mechanisms and structures to improve accountability
and remedial action, including greater collaboration with civil society.
We hope that the 10 point approach below also guides persons
who wish to work with young people in a youth friendly way.