Cairo at 10: Progress in Latin
America and the Caribbean
Highlights of the Technical Report
Here are a few highlights from the 45-page
draft Technical Report of the March 9-11 health and population policy meeting
in Santiago, Chile, where some 300 health ministers
and other policy-makers from 41 countries are evaluating regional progress
toward implementation of the goals of the International Conference on
Population and Development. [Unofficial
translation and paraphrase from the Spanish original.]
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Substantial
progress has been made in all regions of the world, but many gaps and
shortfalls remain.
PRIMARY
AND SECONDARY EDUCATION
·
In Guatemala and Mexico,
economic incentives for girls increase their school attendance.
·
In Chile, Cuba, Panama and Mexico, new measures
avoid drop-outs or marginalization of pregnant students and teenage mothers.
·
Revision of school texts to
eliminate negative gender stereotypes and discriminatory images has taken place
in 8 countries, including Chile.
·
Illiteracy rates have been
reduced in all countries in the region, however gaps remain in achieving
minimum education for all girls and boys. In 2000, official illiteracy rates ranged
from 1.5 percent to over 50 percent.
HIV/AIDS
·
Two million people in Latin America and the Caribbean
live with HIV/AIDS.
·
Prevalence in the region is
above 1 percent in 12 countries, all in the Caribbean.
Most countries have adopted new regulations and developed programs
to prevent and control HIV transmission.
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
Many countries have adopted laws to ensure
the exercise of reproductive rights and access, without discrimination, to
reproductive health services.
·
The new constitutions of Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela
include the right for individuals to make free and responsible decisions on the
number of children, without discrimination, violence or coercion;
·
Population policies in Mexico, Nicaragua and Peru
recognize the principles that guarantee reproductive rights and access to
family planning and reproductive health services;
·
In Brazil,
the law establishes universal integrated health care.
VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN
·
At least eight countries in Latin America and the Caribbean,
including Chile,
have set up high level commissions to formulate national plans or programs to
address violence against women.
·
Several countries in the region
are reducing family and sexual violence by:
Raising awareness
of all citizens through national prevention campaigns;
Creating
institutions to protect victims of violence;
Providing health
care services for victims of family violence.
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
·
In Costa Rica,
the Electoral Supreme Tribunal required political parties to have 40 percent
women on their lists of candidates for municipal elections.
·
In Dominican Republic, women must by law be 40 percent of
local government officials.
·
In Ecuador, minimum participation for women in
electoral positions is 35 percent.
INFORMATION RESEARCH AND TRAINING
·
The extended MercoSur
countries, including Chile,
agreed to use common methods in their 2000 censuses in order to generate
comparative data.
·
Specific surveys on health,
demography and family planning were carried out in 12 countries, generating new
data on fertility rates, child mortality, family planning methods, HIV/AIDS and
domestic violence.
·
Online census data is available
in 7 countries, including Chile.
RIGHTS AND EQUITY
·
Most countries have stronger
public awareness of discrimination against women.
·
Many countries have created
bodies responsible for women’s issues or have strengthened existing ones.
·
Some countries have new programs
targeting poor women and female heads of households with aid in access to
housing, job training and micro-credit.
·
Saint Kitts and Nevis have new laws on sexual harassment and equal pay for equal work.
·
Chile, Colombia and El Salvador
have conducted family and community education programs on the importance of
sharing responsibility in the home and child rearing.
ATTENTION TO
NEEDS OF OLDER PERSONS
·
The rights of older persons are
protected in the constitutions of at least 19 countries.
·
Several national development
plans include national policies for older persons and sectoral programs in
health and social security.
RESOURCES
·
Investment by the international
community is short of commitments made in Cairo
in 1994. Donor countries are providing only about $3.1 billion of the $6.1 billion
they pledged to invest by 2005.
·
While some countries have
received support from international organizations, the volume of international
assistance has been dropping in others, such as Mexico and Nicaragua.
·
Nineteen countries in the
region have increased or sustained resources for implementing health programs
in general and reproductive health programs in particular.
CHALLENGES
·
Maternal death rates continue
high in many countries, even though most deaths could be prevented through
access to family planning, skilled attendance at childbirth and emergency
obstetric care.
·
While there has been progress
to address gender inequality, especially in education where women now outnumber
men in schools in most of the region, discriminatory practices persist and are
reflected in the high concentration of women in careers and disciplines with
little market value attached to them.
·
Gender violence continues,
despite the enactment of many laws against it.
·
Lack of funds and human
resources persist.
ECONOMY
·
In Latin
America, 42 percent of people still live in poverty, unchanged
since 1994.
·
High unemployment persists, particularly
among women and young people.
POPULATION
GROWTH
·
As the 21st century
began, population growth in 19 Latin American countries was less that 1 percent
per year. The lowest rate was in the Caribbean,
at 0.9 percent.
·
People under the age of 15
constitute nearly 40 percent of the population in Belize, Bolivia, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua and Paraguay.
LIFE
EXPECTANCY
·
More than two thirds of the
region’s countries had a life expectancy of 70 years in the period 2000 – 2005,
and progress is expected to continue.
INFANT
MORTALITY
·
Infant mortality has continued
a downward trend, with the lowest rates in the Caribbean.
In the early years of the 21st century, Barbados, Chile, Costa Rica,
Guadalupe, Martinique, Puerto Rico, St. Lucia,
and Trinidad and Tobago
had rates below 15 per 1000 live births. In Cuba, Guadalupe and Martinique, it was 10 per 1000 live births.
·
The disparity between the rates
for urban and rural areas and for educated and educated mothers has not
declined.
MATERNAL
MORTALITY
·
Red tape and scarce information
--identification, classification and registered cases – restrict the adequate
measure of incidents.
·
In Guatemala and Haiti less than
half of births receive qualified medical attention.
·
In rural areas of Bolivia, Guatemala, Haiti and Peru, more than
70 percent of births are not attended by a health professional.
PREGNANCY
AND CONTRACEPTIVES
·
Teen pregnancy has increased in
Brazil,
Chile,
Colombia,
Haiti,
Jamaica,
Dominican Republic
and Uruguay.
In countries that have reported a decrease, such as Nicaragua, the rate continues to be
high (100 or more per 1000 live births)
·
The use of contraceptives among
teens varies considerably: in Costa
Rica and Cuba over 60 percent report the use
of contraceptives, and in Bolivia,
Guatemala,
Haiti
and Honduras
under 30 percent report the use of contraceptives.
PENDING ISSUES
·
The past ten years have shown that mere economic growth is not enough to
achieve social equity and reduce poverty. Redistributive policies are required.
·
Greater political stability demands profound changes in institutions and
in ways of exercising power. There is a need to confront the vices that erode
citizens’ confidence in governments, such as corruption, impunity, inefficiency
and the concentration of power in the hands of a few.
·
Reform of strategic government sectors like health and education has been
erratic.
·
Some countries have either failed to incorporate changes into their
national development plans or their everyday management or their local
planning. In other cases they lack concrete actions and their compliance is
rhetorical only or takes the form of laws that are not put into practice.
·
Health care is very inequitably distributed—the rich have access to the
best quality and the poor have comparatively little access to care that is
often inadequate.
·
Reproductive health care in some countries is restricted to maternal and
infant care. Adolescents and men in particular are often left out.
·
Maternal mortality continues at high levels in many countries, which is
the more worrying because it is preventable. We must reach more people with the
appropriate measures. Low levels of international cooperation and scarce
national resources hurt both quality and quantity of services.
·
The number of girls enrolled in school is greater than boys in most of
the region, but gender equity is a long way from being considered a critical
aspect of development and poverty reduction. Even in education, discrimination
persists, visible in the concentration of women in low-wage disciplines.
·
For both cultural and institutional reasons, laws to prevent domestic and
sexual violence have been inadequate, especially in cases where it is not
viewed as a crime.
·
Quality education for all is still restricted for institutional reasons
and budget shortfalls.
·
More and better data collection is essential.