We have a clinic here in Dandora [a slum in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi] where an old lady helps many women have abortions. I [bled] for two days non-stop. |
According one of the only studies available on the subject, conducted by the Ministry of Health in 2004, some 300,000 women and girls procure abortions each year - 20,000 of which lead to hospitalization as a result of abortion-related complications.
Prisca Wanderi, a traditional birth attendant who offers abortion services to women in Dandora, is kept busy by the demand. “I receive at least five women daily who want me to help them abort their pregnancies. Many of them are young girls, and they tell me they want to abort because they are not married,” she said.
Contraceptives needed
While there are ongoing efforts to legalize abortion, the strong cultural and religious beliefs of most Kenyans mean it will be some time before proponents of legalization make any real headway. Experts say that for practical purposes, the government must do more to enable women and girls to prevent unwanted pregnancies.
“Legal restriction is not deterrent enough, the government must ensure women can easily access contraceptives along other reproductive health services,” James Maina, lecturer and obstetrician-gynaecologist at Kenyatta National Hospital, told IRIN.
The unmet need for contraception in Kenya is high. The 2009 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey found that 25 percent of currently married women in Kenya have an unmet need for family planning - they would like to space their children or stop having children but are not using any form of contraception.
Shahnaz Sharif, director of public health, told IRIN the government was working to increase awareness and uptake of contraceptives. “We provide contraceptives for free in government facilities, and we create a lot of media campaigns around the issue. Through private franchising, women are able to get contraceptives at subsidized prices.”
Overcoming resistance
But Sharif acknowledged that tackling firm religious and cultural beliefs against contraception and premarital sex made spreading the message more difficult.
“Cultural and religious beliefs at times might hamper wide uptake of contraceptives, but we are trying to be diplomatic about this to have everybody on board,” he added. “The introduction of sex education in school to target adolescent girls has, for instance, been very controversial.”
Violet Murunga, a reproductive health researcher at the Africa Institute for Development Policy, a think tank, focused on the concrete steps necessary to increase contraceptive use.
“Ensure service delivery points have a choice of all methods; increase awareness of the benefits of contraceptive use to reduce myths and misconceptions related to use of contraceptives,” she said. “Train more health workers to provide contraceptive services to people who need the services; increase service delivery points where contraceptive services are available.”