Reassessing Institutional Support for Security Council Resolution 1325
Defining the UNFPA Role and Strengthening Support for Women Affected by Conflict
Number of pages: 73
Publication date: 01 January 2006
Author: UNFPA
This report is intended to contribute to the United Nations efforts to implement the Security council resolution 1325 by reassessing the UNFPA institutional support, as well as defining and strengthening UNFPA role in implementing the resolution through global, regional and country programs examples and interventions.
Preventing HIV/AIDS in Young People
Evidence from Developing Countries on what Works
Number of pages: 8
Publication date: 01 January 2006
Author: WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, UNAIDS, LSHTM
Publisher: WHO
Maternal and Neonatal Health in East and South-East Asia
Number of pages: 37
Publication date: 01 January 2006
Author: UNFPA
Publisher: UNFPA
This publication gives an overview of the situation of maternal and newborn health in the East and South East Asia region, with a focus on progress and the interventions needed to save women's and newborn's lives. There is now a clear evidence base of the priority interventions in maternal and newborn health which need to be in place to avert maternal and neonatal mortality in countries with limited resources.
Essential Medicines for Reproductive Health:
Guiding Principles for Their Inclusion on National Medicines Lists
Number of pages: 110
Publication date: 01 January 2006
Author: Jolene Beitz, Jane Hutchings, Dawn Bass and Michele Burns
Publisher: UNFPA, Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH), World Health Organization
In addition to providing a list of essential reproductive health supplies, this guidebook outlines the steps necessary for including reproductive health medicines on country-level lists of essential medicines. It also highlights the consequences of poor reproductive health and the importance of devoting resources to its betterment and reviews the concept of essential medicines lists and their significance.
Special Youth Programme -- Report 2007
Number of pages: 52
Publication date: 01 January 2008
Author: UNFPA
Publisher: UNFPA
Prevention is for Life
HIV/AIDS: Dispatches from the Field
Number of pages: 48
Publication date: 01 January 2008
Author: UNFPA
Prevention is for Life - 2006
Strengthening, Streamlining and Scaling Up Efforts
Number of pages: 2
Publication date: 01 January 2006
Author: UNFPA
Publisher: UNFPA
This brochure briefly describes the scope of the challenge posed by the AIDS epidemic and UNFPA's strategic response to it, highlighting its focus on prevention. The brochure also describes UNFPA's work with vulnerable groups, including young people, and women and girls, as well as its role in building demand for and securing the supply of male and female condoms.
Prevention is for Life: HIV/AIDS: Dispatches from the Field
This report documents experiences and lessons related to training and scaling-up the midwifery workforce. These lessons were shared at the First International Forum on Midwifery in the Community (Tunisia, 2006).
Glion Consultation on Strengthening the Linkages between Reproductive Health and HIV/AIDS
Family Planning and HIV/AIDS in Women and Children
Number of pages: 4
Publication date: 01 January 2006
Author: UNFPA - WHO
Publisher: UNFA - WHO
The International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD, September 1994) established the effective prevention and treatment of sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, as an integral component of reproductive health services. There is a key programmatic linkage between family planning and the prevention of HIV in women and children.This was the focus of a high-level consultation convened by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the World Health Organization (WHO) in Glion, Switzerland, in May 2004.
Although the international community has pledged to address mental health problems related to sexual and reproductive health, too many women and men still suffer their deleterious effects. For example, 20-30% or more women experience depression during pregnancy or after childbirth in developing countries. Mental health should be addressed routinely as part of sexual and reproductive health services.