Bush birth control policies helped fuel Africa’s baby boom
This kind of thing is exactly why one’s personal religious ideology should not determine political decisions. There are consequences to actions and in this case the consequences are suffered by others.
SIRAKANO, Uganda — At age 45, after giving birth to 13 children in her village of thatch roofs and bare feet, Beatrice Adongo made a discovery that startled her: birth control.
“I delivered all these children because I didn’t know there was another way,” said Adongo, who started on a free quarterly contraceptive injection last year. Surrounded by her weary-faced brood, her 21-month-old boy clutching at her faded blue dress, she added glumly: “I fear we are already too many in this family.”
[snip]
Under President George W. Bush, the United States withdrew from its decades-long role as a global leader in supporting family planning, driven by a conservative ideology that favored abstinence and shied away from providing contraceptive devices in developing countries, even to married women.
Bush’s mammoth global anti-AIDS initiative, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, poured billions of dollars into Africa but prohibited groups from spending any of it on family planning services or counseling programs, whose budgets flat-lined.
The restrictions flew in the face of research by international aid agencies, the U.N. World Health Organization and the U.S. government’s own experts, all of whom touted contraception as a crucial method of preventing births of babies being infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
The Bush program is widely hailed as a success, having supplied lifesaving anti-retroviral drugs to more than 2 million HIV patients worldwide.
However, researchers, Africa experts and veteran U.S. health officials now think that PEPFAR also contributed to Africa’s epidemic population growth by undermining efforts to help women in some of the world’s poorest countries exercise greater control over their fertility.
“It was a huge missed opportunity to integrate HIV/AIDS and reproductive health in ways that made sense,” said Jotham Musinguzi, a Ugandan physician who heads the Africa office of Partners in Population and Development, an intergovernmental group that promotes sexual health in developing countries.





December 16th, 2009 at 7:05 am
Back before the invasion and occupation of Iraq, I read a report where Pope John XXIII, in opposition to Bush’s plan to invade Iraq, told Bush Jr. that, “you alone will be responsible for the derailment of the course of humanity.” I believed then, and I still do, that those were deeply wise words. Today I still believe them to be wise, and I think that the implication of those words, the Bush derailment of the course of humanity go far beyond and deeper than just the invasion and occupation of Iraq … the Bush administration policies have derailed sooooo many things, look at how it touched the lives of so many world-wide, so as to derail them from obtaining birth control, better health, not to mention the economy … all of his infectious policies have crept up like a malaise to touch and derail so many lives … I also believe the Y2K virus that everyone feared so on New Year’s Eve 1999 was delivered to us in the person of GWB. And they, the Bushes still have their eyes set on the whitehouse either through the person of Jeb Bush, who is just as bad as his brother, or Jeb’s son “P” Bush.
The one who could not bring himself to teach the Migrants in Florida, and who, after a year of teaching them, moved on to better and more political things for him. They do not care an iota about the rest of those of us common human beings. (Did I go off on a tangent?) I tend to do that. O:-<
timesr Reply:
December 16th, 2009 at 10:22 am
@skyagunsta, “…Bushes still have their eyes set on the whitehouse either through the person of Jeb Bush…”
Jeb Bush signed the PNAC document along with Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, “Scooter” Libby, and more http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_for_the_New_American_Century
(scroll to the bottom to see how many PNAC members ended up in the Bush administration)
Rather than contemplating a comeback, they should be packing toothbrushes in anticipation of a long stay in a federal prison for the death, destruction, and suffering they’ve brought into the world on so many levels.
In short, I agree with you, Sky.
skyagunsta Reply:
December 16th, 2009 at 1:23 pm
@timesr, thank you timesr … thank you for agreeing with me, thank you for the wikipedia link … and a toast to … “they should be packing toothbrushes in anticipation of a long stay in a federal prison for the death, destruction, and suffering they’ve brought into the world on so many levels.” Justice would be so well served.
Sage Reply:
December 16th, 2009 at 2:19 pm
It was a good tangent. Thanks for your comments…they are right on.
skyagunsta Reply:
December 16th, 2009 at 7:59 pm
@Sage, Thanks Sage…
December 16th, 2009 at 7:44 am
My first grandchild will be from Ethiopia. Sometime in the next year. I have been reading up on it and find myself appalled at the lack of reproductive medical care for women there as well. Genital mutilation, sewing the vagina shut for chasity and the fistula from long, medically untended labors cause all kinds of problems for women. Maternal mortality is one of the worlds highest there. Also there is an attitude of the sooner a girl has a bay, the better. Girls are married or sold into prostitution as young as 10 there.
Bush’s beliefs are already well seated there. He scored a lot of points with his base quite easily there. No effort needed since women and their off spring are little more than chattel there.
Sage Reply:
December 16th, 2009 at 2:20 pm
Exactly, Wizcon. The treatment of women is appalling.