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PAID AND
PRESENTED BY

    About this

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  • Protecting Resources
  • Extreme Events
  • Resilient Health

Why climate disaster relief needs to include women’s reproductive health

PAID AND PRESENTED BY BAYER

Women are more affected by climate change than men

but their needs are often overlooked in the aftermath of climate disasters

As extreme weather events increase globally, so does the number of people forced to leave their homes in search of safety and assistance. 

Over the past decade, occurrences of floods, hurricanes and prolonged droughts have risen substantially. This trend, driven by a complex web of factors, including climate change, security and conflict and human activity, has left countless people globally with no other choice but to migrate within and across state borders.  

According to a recent report, 61 million new internal displacements were registered in 2022 worldwide, with more than half triggered by environmental shocks. This represents a 45% increase in the total number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) due to disasters over a two-year timeframe. 

Among those disproportionately affected, girls and women find themselves on the front lines of these twin crises. 

"The implications of displacement are inherently gendered," explains Jordana Ramalho, a lecturer in Development Planning for Diversity at University College London. She adds that, in the context of migration, women often face heightened risks of experiencing gender-based violence (GBV), food insecurity, income loss, unwanted pregnancies and more. 

"Women are more affected by disasters and climate change because they tend to spend more time in and around the home. Their gendered labours are intimately connected to that environment," Ramalho explains. 

Women and girls in fragile contexts are a uniquely vulnerable population.

To date, much of the response from international and humanitarian organisations has focused on providing urgent care to those who need it most. But one crucial aspect tends to be overlooked – reproductive health. More than 40% of women experiencing displacement want to avoid pregnancies, according to the German Red Cross. 

Recognising the urgency, the German Red Cross and the Colombian Red Cross have rolled out a one-of-a-kind emergency family planning programme integrated in its emergency response and piloted in Colombia. Bayer supported the program as part of its aim to help provide 100 million women in low- and middle-income countries with modern contraception yearly by 2030. 

Across Latin America, thousands of people have been forced to flee due to armed conflict and environmental disasters such as droughts, floods, glacier loss, heat waves, hurricanes, and mudslides. In 2021, disasters caused 1.7 million new displacements in Latin America and the Caribbean, with 33,000 and 32,000 people reported to have been moved in Venezuela and Colombia, respectively. The emergency situation has affected people's health and livelihoods, resulting in an uptick of migrants and refugees from Venezuela. As of the latest available data, 2.5 million Venezuelans currently reside in Colombia. 

In these challenging circumstances, the need for family planning is even greater, Ramalho explains. In times of conflict and displacement, people still engage in intimacy, and additional needs can arise concerning contraception, sexual health prevention, and STI screenings. That's precisely the gap that the Colombian Red Cross is hoping to bridge. 

Many people walk to the border on foot, enduring long hours just for contraceptives

JEISON ORDUZ

The pilot programme was designed to provide women across Colombia with 4,000 contraceptives and 3,300 consultations within a six-month timeframe at the end of 2022. The initiative focused on the departments of La Guajira, Cesar, Norte de Santander, and Vichada, all considered migration hotspots due to their proximity to the border with Venezuela. 

From July 2022 to March 2023, the team strategically deployed mobile and fixed health units across the country, aligning with migration routes. Aided by local volunteers who helped educate and assess the priorities of the community, medical staff comprising doctors and nurses offered free consultations and a range of essential contraceptives to women. The primary aim of the pilot was to respond to urgent needs while assessing the potential for scalability in future climate-related crises. 

Jeison Orduz, a passionate nurse who has been working for the Colombian Red Cross for two years, says the hurdles in accessing affordable and regular reproductive care are monumental. He has witnessed these hardships firsthand during his time in the hub of Cúcuta, in the department of Norte de Santander.  

According to Orduz, the population seeking family planning in Cúcuta includes both Colombians facing armed conflict and barriers to planning services and Venezuelan migrants and refugees. 

"Many people walk to the border on foot, enduring long hours just for a contraceptive method or medication," says Orduz. 

Orduz adds that numerous women arrive with expired or improperly placed contraceptives, posing a threat to their overall health. 

Among the methods proposed by the Colombian Red Cross, subdermal implants seem to be the most common choice. According to the pilot study, they account for 87% of interventions, followed by trimester injections (6%), monthly injections (4%), and oral contraceptives (3%). The majority of women, typically between the ages of 18 and 35, appreciated the long term nature of the implant, as it does not necessitate overly frequent follow-ups after insertion. 

"Our target population prefers a method that doesn't require to be constantly attending the health centre because they don't have access to that," says Lucy Murillo, the health project manager for the German and Colombian Red Cross. 

The demand for implants has been overwhelming, Orduz recalls. The sheer number of women seeking this contraceptive method even posed time constraints on the nurse's ability to provide services to everyone. "When I was there, on average, I placed about 30 to 35 implants daily. Even if I attended to 20 women, 20 more would show up every day… I simply didn't have enough time."  

In their day-to-day work, care providers like Orduz address concerns regarding specific methods, along with societal norms and taboos surrounding sexuality and contraception. To tackle these issues, the nurses provided explanations and visual aids designed to educate and reassure women of expected side effects, and offered one-on-one counselling. 

"We noticed that the more education and clarity we provided to patients, the better their adherence to family planning methods," Murillo explains. 

In many cases, the nurse not only lends an attentive ear to patients but also pays attention to nonverbal cues that might indicate instances of GBV that might not otherwise be apparent and specify the need for protection needs which must be covered by the humanitarian community and governmental institutions. 

"Sometimes, I find myself acting not only as a nurse but also as a psychologist because what they [patients] seek is someone who will listen to their stories," Orduz said. "When it comes to recognising signs of [GBV], it's easy to miss certain cues if you're not meticulous enough. Paying close attention to these details is crucial." The range of services available to these women includes psychology and even awareness workshops on domestic abuse. 

Estefania Vasquez and Nayeli Yerineth Colina were both beneficiaries of the emergency planning module offered by the Colombian Red Cross in 2022. 

Vasquez, a mother of five and a migrant from Barquisimeto, Venezuela, shares that she and her husband decided to stop having children before she moved to Colombia. Despite enduring excruciating side effects ranging from nausea to dizziness, she opted for the pill in the absence of more affordable options available.  

Now that she has been administered an implant from the Colombian Red Cross, Vasquez says her mind is at ease knowing she won't have to concern herself with changing it for the next five years. Colina, also a Venezuelan citizen, expresses similar satisfaction with the care she received in Norte de Santander.

The more education and clarity we provided to patients, the better their adherence to family planning methods

LUCY MURILLO

While there are no concrete plans to scale the Colombian Red Cross pilot study to comparable contexts, climate crises are likely to worsen over the next few years, with even more harmful effects on women, rendering the need for consolidated action more pressing.  

Estimates suggest that up to 216 million people could become internally-displaced persons due to climate change by 2050. Latin America, in particular, is a region where the likelihood and harmful effects of future crises could increase with no consolidated global policy response. 

Lyla Mehta, a professorial fellow at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, stresses that such action should have locally-led approaches at its core. She highlights the need for intersectional analysis to understand the diverse impacts of climate shocks on women, cautioning against portraying them as perpetually vulnerable. "Effective adaptation must be transformative and address systemic inequality across identities such as caste, class, race, and religion," says Mehta. 

Francisco Moreno, national executive director of the Colombian Red Cross, echoes Mehta's recommendations, adding, "this family planning module has allowed us… to advise on what is the most appropriate method. It is not the same for all women." 

"One of the main conclusions is the need to provide sexual and reproductive health and family planning in all emergency components," Moreno added. "It is a need that isn't always obvious [but] extremely necessary."  

Moving forward, he emphasises the importance of cultural inclusion and the need to come up with solutions "in a differentiated way" that support people standing at the intersection of diverse sexual and cultural identities. 

Adapting the approach to meet the needs of communities, including Afro-descendant and indigenous populations, and understanding their experiences, will continue to remain crucial, Moreno highlights. He added that men's share of responsibility concerning family planning is often left out of the equation when considering the array of options available for contraception.  

"It's important to identify the contexts of populations in different places to understand [them] and address some gaps that may also exist in men's thinking," Moreno said. "In some environments, [men] do not understand family planning." 

Despite the constraints, the Colombian Red Cross remains committed to making a positive impact. The Red Cross Red Crescent Movement, which counts more than 14 million volunteers globally, is working on both emergency health and longer-term community-based programs, integrating tools for all National Societies in the movement. 

As Moreno says, "the needs are great, they are pressing, the resources are always limited, but we will continue to help." 

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