Stand by for a report
on reproductive health care and youth
Frame 2:
Video news release
provided by:the david and lucile
packard foundation
Frame 3:
This report is
provided free of charge to broadcast television outlets.Stations may use it in its entirety or any
portion of the audio or video.Its
reuse in syndicated material sold or distributed to television outlets is
restricted and allowed only w/ written permission from DDB.
Frame 4:
For more information
please call Leslie cohan at 206-326-5115
Frame 5:
Suggested Anchor lead
While World leaders
and governments debate about appropriate sex education and health care for
youth, the reality of HIV and aids, sexually transmitted diseases, and
unintended pregnancies persists among adolescents.
this month, as the un
special session on children convenes in new york, the question of how to
approach issues of sexuality and health care for youth will be hotly contested.
OUR NEXT REPORT TELLS
US HOW ACCESS TO REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE CAN Make a DIFFERENCE in young lives
around the world.
Frame 6, 7, 8… Script
****TBD****
Countdown, then news release
Frame 9:
Stand by for extra
bites
Frame 10:
Stand by for extra
b-rol
Frame 11:
For more information
on reproductive health care and adolescents, visit www. planetwire.org
Frame12:
Stand by for NAT
sound version
VIDEOAUDIO
Footage of young people talking, playing, living.
There is one commonality among young people
worldwide, no matter where they live; they want to grow up, find their
independence and begin their lives as adults.In developing countries, access to reproductive health
education and services is critical to this process, and is imperative to the
health, education and livelihood of young people, especially for the development
of young girls.
SOT
– James Wagoner, President, Advocates for youth
IN:04:13:02 – OUT 04:32
RESPONSIBILITY IS A TWO-WAY STREET.YOUNG PEOPLE MUST SAFEGUARD THEIR OWN SEXUAL HEALTH AND THAT OF
OTHERS.SOCIETY NEEDS TO PROVIDE
YOUNG PEOPLE WITH THE TOOLS OF RESPONSIBILITY, ACQURATE INFORMATION,
CONFIDENTIAL ACCESS TO CONTRACEPTION ARE A REAL STAKE IN THE FUTURE.
.
Footage of young girls with children or young
families
According to the World Health Organization, more than 10% of all
births are to young women ages 15 to 19 years old.Unintended pregnancies can irrevocably disrupt a young girl’s life,
preventing further schooling and training.Adolescent
teenage girls who become pregnant,
and who are not physically mature, are in danger of obstructed labor and
complications before, during and after delivery.
Education footage, classes, doctor’s offices
Young
women who are educated about reproductive health care are more likely to
continue their education, increase their earning potential, maintain their
status in the household, and often choose to space their pregnancies, having
fewer children, whom they are better able to raise and nurture.
SOT – Phatsimo, Botswana
In 1:04:26:26
“When I am 15 and I get pregnant, my body
isn’t ready to develop yet to accommodate the baby.When I go and deliver my baby, my baby is at risk, I, the
mother, is at risk, and we can lose both lives just for the fact that
treatment(?) teenagers are getting…”
Footage of schools and young girls or young
mothers
SOT Phatsimo: From Botswana
In 1:07:38:25
“The minute you get pregnant in Botswana,
school stops.In Botswana, you need
education for survival.If you don’t
get educated, you cannot survive. People who graduate at the universities
don’t get a job, what about you, a mother who is young?”
Boitshoko, Botswana
In 1:09:46:27 ABOUT :30 INTO IT
“Providing information
is actually not enough because the problem seems to be the inaccessibility of
the health facilities.It is not that
the youth don’t know that they fall pregnant if they have sex, the problems
is that the facilities are not accessible to them.So basically, it is a matter of lobbying for youth facilities”
sWEEPING FOOTAGE OF THE LIFE THERE, YOUNG GIRLS AND
BOYS, YOUNG BABIES, EDUCATION – SHOULD END WITH A HOPEFUL VISUAL.
While
world leaders and governments debate the necessity and approach to
reproductive health care and young people, new cases of HIV and AIDS,
sexually transmitted diseases, and unintended pregnancies continue to increase among adolescents.
To ensure that reproductive health care and
education for adolescents becomes a reality, policymakers must make these
services a priority.As a result,
young people will become empowered to continue their education, make mature
family planning decisions and ultimately live longer, healthier lives, free
of HIV, AIDS and unintended pregnancies.
PLANetWIRE.org is managed by the Communications Consortium Media Center.
Contact Nicole Tidwell, 202-326-8710, for more information or to provide feedback.
Privacy Policy: Your email address will not be used for any purpose other than to keep you updated on the status of this site.