AVIVA-Violence Against Women: A Public Health Emergency
Author: Womens UN Report Network
Date: October 6, 2015
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International News Edited by Farhat Bokhari
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A Public Health Emergency
Violence against women
and girls is a universal problem of epidemic proportions, but its human cost
often remains invisible. At least one out of every three women around the world
has been beaten, coerced into sex, or otherwise abused in her lifetime. The
abuser is usually someone known to the victim. In 2002, the Council of Europe
declared violence against women a public health emergency and a major cause of
death and disability for women 16 to 44 years of age. A World Bank report
estimated that violence against women was as serious a cause of death and
incapacity among women of reproductive age as cancer, and a greater cause of
ill-health, than traffic accidents and malaria combined. A 2003 report by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that the costs of
intimate partner violence in the United States alone exceed $5.8 billion per
year: $4.1 billion in direct medical and health care services and almost $1.8
billion in productivity losses. For the most part, the human cost of
gender-based violence is invisible. Fear and shame continue to prevent many
women from speaking out, and data collected is often insufficient and
inconsistent. Even in countries that enjoy relative peace and prosperity, many
women are living in a constant state of insecurity.
Violence
against women occurs in all regions and countries and much of it is invisible.
Police in countries around the world say that many rape victims do not report
the crime. Often, countries reporting the incidence of violence are the ones
doing the most to counter it. In the Dominican Republic, reports indicate that
in cases of violence against women, the aggressors are partners or former
partners of the victims in 40-68% of the cases. In Georgia, it has been reported
that 50% of families experience some form of domestic violence. In India,
statistics indicate that 14 wives are murdered by their husbands’ family every
day. According to a 2002 report by the World Health Organization, studies in
Australia, Canada, Israel, South Africa and the US have shown that 40-70% of
women who have been murdered were killed by their intimate partners, usually in
the context of an abusive relationship. The World Health Organization (WHO)
reports that in the United Kingdom 40% of female homicide victims are killed by
their husbands or boyfriends. A study in Sweden found that 70% of women had
experienced some form of violence or sexual harassment. Statistics from the
Netherlands show that about 200,000 women are subjected to violence each year by
their intimate partners. It has been reported that 6 in 10 women in Botswana are
victims of domestic violence, while in Moldova, 31 % of girls and young women
(ages 16-19) are reported to have experienced sexual violence. Source:
UNIFEM, 20.11.05. E-mail: leigh.pasqual@undp.org
Domestic Abuse
1 in 6 women worldwide
suffers domestic violence – some battered during pregnancy – yet many remain
silent about the assaults, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said. In its
first global study, the WHO also said physically- or sexually-abused women were
more likely to suffer longer-term health problems, including distress and
suicide attempts. The UN agency called for changing behaviour through education
programs and training more health workers and police to investigate signs of
mistreatment. “Women are more at risk from violence involving people they know
at home than from strangers in the street. There is a feeling that the home is a
safe haven and that pregnancy is a very protected period, but that is not the
case,” WHO’s director-general Lee Jong-Wook said. “Domestic violence remains
largely hidden.” The Women’s Health and Domestic Violence Against Women study is
based on interviews with more than 24,000 women in 10 countries, ranging from
Japan and Thailand to Ethiopia and Peru. It paints a harrowing picture of broken
bones, bruises, burns, cracked skulls, dislocated jaws, rape and fear. Husbands
or intimate partners are the main perpetrators. “Every 18 seconds, somewhere, a
woman suffers violence or maltreatment … We must put an end to this shameful
practice,” said Spain’s Health Minister Elena Salgado, current president of
WHO’s annual health assembly. Domestic violence can be sparked by dinner being
late, not finishing the housework on time, disobeying or refusing to have sex,
the report said. In many cases women agree that a man is justified in beating
his wife under certain circumstances. In terms of symptoms – pain, dizziness,
mental distress, miscarriages – the findings across the 15 urban and rural
settings were “remarkably consistent”, according to Claudia Garcia-Moreno, the
study’s coordinator. “Whether you are a cosmopolitan woman in Sao Paulo, Brazil
or Japan, or a rural woman in Ethiopia or Peru, the association between violence
and poor health remains,” she told reporters. “The striking thing we found is
the degree that this violence still remains hidden. Between one-fifth and
two-thirds of women interviewed had never spoken before to anyone of the
experience of their partner’s violence,” she added. This sense of helplessness
was “a torture in itself”. Other countries covered in the 7-year study, issued
to coincide with the UN’s International Day for the Elimination of Violence
against Women, included Samoa, Bangladesh, Namibia, Tanzania and Serbia and
Montenegro. Between 4-12% cent of women who had been pregnant reported being
beaten during pregnancy – more than 90% by the father of the unborn child,
according to the report. “Most of the violence that pregnant women were
experiencing is a continuation of the violence going on before,” said Lori
Heise, a member of the core research team from the Washington-based group PATH.
Source: Reuters, 15.11.05.
Website: www.who.int/gender/violence
With AIDS
Having to pay for HIV care increases the risk of
treatment failure, a study by a leading aid agency says. The research by
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) found that nearly half of people on
antiretroviral (ARV) treatment in Nigeria did not receive sufficient doses due
to lack of funds. MSF studied 122 patients in Lagos who had enrolled for MSF
treatment after previously having to pay for care. It found that those on the
free programme received treatment consistently, as opposed to those that had to
pay for treatment.
It recommended that greater efforts need to be made
to enable developing countries to provide free treatment, as well as improve
their health infrastructure so that drugs can be delivered to the people who
need them. The Nigerian government is insisting that public hospital patients
pay for at least part of their own HIV care, including drugs and monitoring. To
pay for their care, 39% of respondents reported borrowing or begging, while one
in five said they had been forced to sell property. Dr Jens Wenkel, of MSF, said
the patients who had taken insufficient drugs were at risk: These patients are
more vulnerable to AIDS-related infections such as pneumonia or TB. So forcing
people to pay, and thereby risking treatment interruptions, can make this
life-prolonging treatment less effective. Paying for HIV treatment is not
uncommon. Other African countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo also
charge patients. Yusef Azad, the National AIDS Trust’s Director of Policy, said:
“We still have a long way to go to reach the goal of universal access to
treatment by 2010. The provision of free treatment is also a vital aspect of HIV
prevention as people have little incentive to test if they cannot afford life
saving treatment.” Source: BBC News, 11.12.05. Website: http://news.bbc.co.uk
Linked to Violence Against Women
As the world
commemorated December 1 as World AIDS Day, the 2005 theme, “Keep the Promise,”
exhorts us to fulfill promises made by the 2001 UN General Assembly Special
Session and its Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS. The Declaration
recognized many factors that perpetuate HIV/AIDS, including violence against
women. The promises made in the Declaration included that by 2005 governments
would develop and implement “national strategies for women’s empowerment” and
support the elimination of “all forms of violence against women and girls.” But,
have these promises been kept? The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that
nearly one in three women will be coerced into sex or assaulted in her lifetime.
The UNAIDS Epidemic Report 2005 indicates that between one third and one half of
women in Bangladesh, Brazil, Ethiopia, Namibia and Thailand said they had been
physically or sexually assaulted by their partners. WHO also reports that at
least 10% of women will be raped by an intimate partner. In Sub-Saharan Africa,
as much as 48% of women report their first sexual experience was coerced. Rape
is also a weapon of war. Today, the UN estimates that 175,000 women raped during
Rwanda’s 1994 genocide are HIV positive. Much of this violence is enabled by
disempowering societal norms, perpetuated by governments that lack capacity or
will to implement protective legislation. Clearly much more will need to be done
to keep the promises of 2001. An illustrative example of the link between
violence against women and HIV/AIDS is a recent study in South Africa found that
women who were physically assaulted by their intimate partners were 48% more
likely to become HIV-infected than those who were not. When you think about the
number of women who are abused around the world, their increased risk of HIV is
enormous indeed. Worldwide, women make up almost half of all people living with
HIV/AIDS, and married women are at highest risk—even when faithful to their
husbands. In Sub-Saharan Africa the proportion is even higher, yet nine out of
ten Africans go without lifesaving drugs. In East Asia the percentage of women
with HIV increased by 56% between 2002 and 2004. These sick women are teachers,
food producers, caregivers. Without them, entire generations will face even
worse poverty and disease burdens.
That 2001
Declaration made another promise: by 2005, to reduce by 25% HIV/AIDS prevalence
in the most affected countries. Another broken promise, since only one out of
five people has access to prevention services. But with political will and
adequate resources, prevention can be successful. Last week’s UNAIDS report
indicates that intensive efforts to promote safer behaviors, including the use
of condoms, have reduced HIV rates in countries like Zimbabwe. Determined
efforts at protecting women’s rights and changing behaviors that put them at
risk can work too. One approach is enacting legal protections, such as
guaranteeing property rights and prosecuting for domestic violence. One study
found that enforcement of property rights in India was protective against
domestic violence. And UNAIDS has lauded efforts like Botswana’s law to give
married women increased access to their families’ resources. In June President
Bush announced his Women’s Justice and Empowerment in Africa Initiative, which
would support through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief legal
systems that do justice for women. While this proposal is promising, it is
proceeding at a snail’s pace. It should be rapidly assigned to a US agency and
implemented so that its success may be tested. The US can and should use its
influence to encourage commitment to protecting women and reducing the impact of
HIV/AIDS by advocating for women’s rights legislation to be incorporated into
every national AIDS strategy. The US must also ensure that programs to treat
women like those in Rwanda are fully funded through mechanisms such as the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. It is only by combining
legal empowerment of women with attention to their health care needs that the
women’s HIV/AIDS epidemic can be addressed. This World AIDS Day offers an
opportunity to consider these broken promises, and to begin a new chapter in
fighting the HIV/AIDS epidemic. If we take seriously its twin epidemic—violence
against women—we can make great strides in human rights, global health, and
simple integrity. We made the promises. Now it’s time to keep
them.
Source: Global AIDS Alliance. Email: lschechtman@globalaidsalliance.org
AIDS Target
The head of the
World Health Organization’s (WHO) HIV/AIDS programme has apologised for its
failure to meet a global target for the treatment of HIV. It had aimed to get
three million people in poor countries on HIV drugs by the end of this year, but
the WHO admits that target will be missed. When the WHO announced in June 2005
that only one million of the three million people it had hoped to have on drugs
were receiving them, it became apparent that the ambition would not be
fulfilled. In an interview with the BBC, the head of the programme, Jim Yong-Kim
has said sorry. “All we can do is apologise. I think we have to just admit we’ve
not done enough and we started way too late.” However, Dr Kim says despite
missing the target, the programme has not been a failure.
“Before Three
by Five, there was not an emphasis on saving lives,” he said. Many leaders in
the world were saying we just have to forget about this generation of people who
are infected, we’re really thinking about the next generation. So something has
happened that’s extraordinary.” Anti-retrovirals (ARVs), greatly improve the
quality of life and life expectancy for people infected with HIV, but the most
optimistic estimates suggest only one in 10 Africans and one in seven Asians are
currently getting the treatment they need. According to UN figures out last week
over 40 million people worldwide are now infected with the HIV virus. Source:
BBC News, 25.11.05. Website: http://news.bbc.co.uk
Missing School
New figures indicate that
the UN has fallen well short of its Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target of
getting as many girls educated as boys. It is estimated that 46 countries may
feel to attain this goal. The UN children’s fund, Unicef, says that out of the
115 million children around the world not getting any primary school education,
90 million of these are girls. Outdated sexual stereotypes, poverty, HIV/AIDS
and armed conflict are blamed for the failure to achieve this goal. Many girls
are denied schooling because cultural traditions define a female’s place as in
the home, and social pressure is exerted for them to marry early, sometimes as
young as the age of 10, the UN says. Male privilege and entitlement (ensure)
that when educational opportunities are limited, boys will take available
classroom space. “Education of children, especially girls, is the cornerstone to
national progress,” said Unicef Executive Director, Ann Veneman said in a
statement. “It leads to greater economic productivity, reduced infant and
maternal mortality, and a greater likelihood that the next generation of
children will go to school.” Many of the countries highlighted in the report are
in sub-Saharan Africa, but Turkey, which recently began accession talks to the
EU, was also listed. The problem is worst in the rural east and south-east of
Turkey, and poor areas of the big cities, where children are often used for
seasonal work.
A high-profile campaign by Unicef backed by the
Turkish government has helped to close the gap to just under 6 per cent on
average. In some areas, volunteers have been going door-to-door encouraging
families to give their daughters an education. However, more than half a million
Turkish girls are still kept out of school. Source: BBC News, 25.11.05.
Website: http://news.bbc.co.uk
Million Under 5s Annually
United Nations Population Fund country
representative, Deji Popoola has said over 12 million children in developing
countries under the age of five die annually because of
poverty. Opening the second Civil Society for Poverty
Reduction (CSPR) Annual General Meeting, Popoola said poverty remained the
biggest killer and cause of ill health as people could not afford to access
health care and social amenities. “Every year in developing
countries, 12.2 million children under the age of five die, most of them from
causes that could have been prevented. They die because they are poor,” he
said. Popoola said the gap between the rich and poor had continued to widen,
systematically pushing down the poverty ladder. He said while life expectancy in
Zambia was 50 years, people in developed countries could live up to 82 years,
almost twice as long. Popoola said poverty still remained the main reason
babies were not vaccinated, and why clean water and sanitation are not
provided. “It is the underlying cause of reduced life
expectancy, handicap, disability and starvation,” he said.
Popoola also said
with 70% cent of the world’s poor being women, they were more susceptible to HIV
infection. Source: The Post reported in Push Journal, 5.12.05,
via IPPF News. Website: www.ippf.org
Conflict Situations
Nine conflict situations
around the world deteriorated in November 2005, according to the new issue of
CrisisWatch. In Ethiopia, opposition protests over the results of the May
parliamentary elections provoked a massive crackdown by security forces with at
least 46 deaths and thousands of arrests. Tensions also rose between Ethiopia
and Eritrea, as both countries deployed high concentrations of troops to their
disputed border, risking a return to war. In Azerbaijan, parliamentary elections
on 6 November failed to meet international standards and provoked street
protests. Suspected Islamist militants intensified attacks on the judiciary in
Bangladesh. In Jordan, three coordinated suicide bomb attacks at Western hotels
killed 60. The situations also deteriorated in Chad, Sierra Leone, Turkey and
Uganda. Three conflict situations improved in November 2005. Nepal’s Maoist
rebels announced their acceptance of multi-party democracy and renounced
violence against civilians in a landmark deal with seven political parties. For
December 2005, CrisisWatch identifies Iraq and Ethiopia/Eritrea as Conflict Risk
Alerts, or situations at particular risk of new or significantly escalated
conflict in the coming month. Source: CrisisWatch, 1.12.05. www.crisisgroup.org
Repression & Abuse
AIDS activists around the world face frequent
government repression and abuse and need substantially increased support
and
protections, said Human Rights Watch (HRW) on World
AIDS Day. “The few success stories we have in the global fight against AIDS are
the result of the heroic efforts of courageous individuals mobilizing
impoverished, marginalized, and stigmatized populations to action,” said Joe
Amon, director of the HIV/AIDS Program at HRW. “But AIDS activists and
outreach workers are often harassed or even jailed by their governments for
simply standing up and speaking out about AIDS, and the international donor
community is doing too little to protect them.” HRW has documented numerous
cases of AIDS activists and NGOs being harassed, intimidated, or jailed for
their work. In China, government officials have jailed activists seeking
to expose government complicity in a tainted blood scandal that infected
millions of impoverished people with HIV in the 1990s. In India and
Bangladesh, outreach workers delivering services to sex workers, to men who have
sex with men, and to other hidden populations, have faced widespread police
harassment and violence. In Uganda, activists protesting the government’s recent
turn toward moralistic “abstinence-until-marriage” programs face intimidation
from officials and accusations of immorality. In the Philippines, police
routinely arrest women and accuse them of prostitution for simply carrying
condoms. In Russia, the parliament is considering legislation that would
tighten government control over Russian and foreign NGOs, threatening vital
outreach and education programs for injecting drug users and sex workers.
Activists have encountered government violence for doing nothing but
demonstrating peacefully for access to health care. This year in
Queenstown, South Africa, police fired rubber bullets and teargas at members of
the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) who were protesting the slow progress of the
government’s antiretroviral treatment program. HRW has called for a full
investigation into this incident. “Bitter experience has shown that repressing
civil society only fuels AIDS epidemics,” said Amon. “Where repression
rules the day, AIDS wins.” Since 2002, HRW has honored six individuals or
organizations for their courageous work defending the rights of people living
with or affected by AIDS. Source: HRW, 1.12.05. Website: www.hrw.org
for AIDS Prevention
An Office of the US
Global AIDS Coordinator directive that took effect from October 2005 provides
guidelines on how federal funding for international HIV/AIDS programmes that
work to prevent sexual transmission of HIV must be used and would increase the
amount of US funding countries spend on programmes that promote abstinence and
fidelity. The document was provided to a Baltimore newspaper, the Sun by an
unnamed federal AIDS official who thought that US international HIV prevention
efforts would be hindered by the new policy. According to the document, which
outlines how fiscal year 2006 money should be spent, “66 per cent of resources
dedicated to prevention of HIV from sexual transmission must be used for
activities that promote abstinence before marriage and fidelity.” Under the
guidelines, at least half of total prevention funding must be spent on sexual
transmission initiatives, with the remainder going toward programmes that
prevent HIV transmission from mother to child or through the blood supply. Many
countries last year spent much more than half of their total prevention budgets
on sexual transmission programmes, meaning that the policy change will increase
funding for abstinence programmes while “implicitly set[ting] tighter limits on
spending for condoms,” according to the Sun. The 2005 budget included $295
million for international HIV prevention programmes, and that amount likely will
be increased in 2006. Deputy US Global AIDS Coordinator, Mark Dybul said the
decree aims to make HIV programmes adhere to legal requirements of the
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, which call for at least one-third of
overall prevention funding to be spent on abstinence programmes. Dybul said that
the directive is a “guidance” and is not inflexible, adding that the decision
would correct an inequality. The unnamed official that provided the report said
that agency officials are treating the policy change as a rigid order.
Source: Kaiser Network, 12.12.05, via IPPF News. Website: www.ippf.org
Distribution of Female Condom
As World AIDS Day
approached, leaders of the YWCA across Africa came together to call on national
governments and international donors to accelerate distribution of the female
condom to women in developing countries: “The global AIDS pandemic is rapidly
evolving into a pandemic for women, and we urgently need female controlled
prevention methods that are accessible
to women in the fight
against AIDS. The World YWCA is issuing a direct appeal to national health
ministries, foreign aid agencies and international NGOs. We call on these
entities to sign agreements in 2006 that will commit them to purchasing a
minimum of 180 million of the second-generation female condom for annual global
distribution. We also call on governments to ensure that the female condom is
marketed to women in local communities and promoted as an effective method to
prevent HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections. We demand this level of
commitment because research has shown that the coordinated purchase of 180
million female condoms will immediately drive down their cost by more than
two-thirds — to 22 cents. This is still a high cost
for many of the
world’s women who earn less than $1 per day, but it will make female condoms
more accessible to the millions of women who live every day of their lives at
risk of HIV infection. Women and girls need access to the full range of HIV
preventive tools
available. But last year, national governments and
international donors made only 12 million female condoms available for worldwide
distribution while they distributed between six and nine billion male condoms.
Three male condoms were purchased for every man on earth, but only one female
condom for every 250 women. This is a gross disparity that must be addressed.
Accelerated female condom distribution and education is essential. HIV infection
rates among women are rising disproportionately to men in every region of the
world, and young women and girls account for 76% of infections among African
youth. And when AIDS affects women, it affects entire families and communities,
tearing apart social safety nets and fueling instability and
conflict.
There are now
more than 15 million AIDS orphans in Africa, many of whom drop out of school,
struggle for daily survival and are subject to exploitation and abuse. Clearly
the future of Africa and developing nations is tied to what we do for women —
and to what we enable women to do for themselves. Female condoms remain the only
tool for HIV prevention that women can initiate and control. Research in South
Africa and Brazil has shown that female condom use — even at current low levels
— can save thousands of lives and millions of dollars in public health
spending. And a new second-generation female condom is being made that will
allow dramatic reductions in price according to the quantities purchased. What
is needed to achieve affordable global access to the female condom is the will
and commitment of national health ministries and international donors. When
women receive the female condom and are educated on its use, it becomes an item
they demand. And women can often negotiate the use of female condoms in
situations where use of the male condom is difficult or not possible due to
personal or cultural constraints. As experienced advocates for women’s health
worldwide, we believe that grassroots demand for the female condom will grow as
more women use it. And to help create this demand, we are pleased to announce
that the maker of the second-generation female condom — the Female Health
Company — has agreed to provide thousands of free female condoms for HIV
education programs conducted by YWCAs around the world. Representatives of the
YWCA are calling for the accelerated purchase of 180 million female condoms per
year and accompanying education and community distribution. We bring our demand
to world attention in advance of World AIDS Day. All prevention methods have
their place, and people make choices based on the realities of their lives.
Abstinence, faithfulness in marriage and male condoms all are valid prevention
methods. However, the female condom provides an opportunity for women to
actively take part in the discussion on condom use, and it enables women to be
in a position where they can offer to protect themselves, rather than waiting to
be protected. Access to the full range of HIV prevention tools is essential if
we are to protect women, men, and children from AIDS. It is time to demand equal
protection. Source: YWCA, 20.11.05.
Website: www.prnewswire.com
to End Violence Against Women
The United Nations Trust Fund to Eliminate Violence
against Women will grant US$1.8 million to 24 groups in developing countries who
are working to end gender-based violence in their communities. The announcement
was made on the occasion of International Day for the Elimination of Violence
Against Women which falls on November 25th each year. The Trust Fund is a unique
multi-lateral mechanism established by the UN General Assembly in 1996 and
administered by UNIFEM. Grants are awarded by a committee comprised of
representatives of UN agencies and international NGOs. Grants this year went to
initiatives that focused on ensuring that national policies and laws to end
violence against women were being implemented. “Great strides have been made in
setting policies and legal frameworks – the challenge now is to ensure
implementation,” said Noeleen Heyzer, executive director of UNIFEM. “The
effective strategies supported by the Trust Fund are key to lives free of
violence for women and girls. These must now be scaled up to become standard
practice everywhere,” she added. Community leaders, traditional authorities, and
health and legal service providers will be trained to advocate on and apply new
laws to address gender-based violence in Tanzania, Cambodia and southern
Nigeria; a regional programme in Central America will analyse domestic violence
legislation in 7 countries to monitor its interpretation in court from a human
rights perspective; a network of Afro-Brazilian women will advocate in Brazil
against social and institutional racism that is impeding implementation of end
violence legislation and posing obstacles to women accessing
justice;
The response of law enforcement and judicial bodies
to cases of violence against women will be enhanced through extensive training
of police forces throughout Papua New Guinea; through the creation of
female-friendly police and legal procedures in Bhutan; and through sensitizing
medical experts on the impact of their reporting during sexual violence court
case proceedings in Pakistan;
Various government
and nongovernmental bodies that respond to gender-based violence in Colombia,
and Dominica, will be brought together to develop a better integrated,
multi-sectoral approach to providing services for victims and implementing
appropriate legislation and policies; in Macedonia, a similar integrated
approach will be developed, targeted particularly at the civil justice system,
while in Tajikistan unified efforts will tackle specific end violence provisions
in state legislation; A coalition of NGOs in Mali will work with
parliamentarians to pass legislation to ban female genital excision; and in
Swaziland data on sexual violence will be collected and analysed to support the
passing of a sexual offences bill that is pending in parliament; This year’s
grant cycle also included an ‘HIV/AIDS window’ for proposals that targeted the
linkage between gender-based violence and the spread of
HIV/AIDS.
Source: UNIFEM, 21.11.05. Website: www.unifem.org
the Poor’
Health programmes aimed
at helping the poorest people in developing countries are more likely to benefit
the wealthier groups in their society, according to a study by the World Bank
into the impact of such schemes across 20 nations in Africa, Asia and Latin
America. The report found health programmes “usually end up reaching people in
better-off groups more frequently. It said this was the case in both private and
public sector schemes. “The richest 20% of the population received more,
or as much as, of the government’s subsidised maternal and child healthcare
(MCH) services as the poorest 20%,” said the report. It said this was case
across almost all of the 20 countries surveyed. “This report shows there’s a
huge difference between just thinking you’re reaching the poor with beneficial
healthcare services, and actually succeeding,” said the report’s co-author
Davidson Gwatkin. The study was sponsored by the Dutch and Swedish governments
and the Gates Foundation, the charity of Microsoft boss Bill Gates. It did
however find exceptions to the rule, such as a Mexican scheme which helps poor
families pay for their medical care and school attendance for their children. In
this programme, 60 per cent of the benefits went to the poorest 20% of the
country’s population. Source: BBC News,
7.12.05.
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