A tale of two regions: reproductive health in the Caribbean and the Gulf.
Yeboah, David Achanfuo
INTRODUCTION
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CONTINUES TO constitute an important area in
the fields of demography and medicine. Reproductive health has evolved
from involving contraceptive use, family planning, abortion and related
fields to include the attendance of births by skilled health
professionals, safe delivery of babies, encouraging women to exercise
their right to choose and the practice of healthy life styles during
pregnancy and gestation. An integral component of reproductive health
today is the integration of HIV/AIDS services and programs in family
planning and other reproductive health activities. Today, reproductive
health is not only a major health issue, but also a means to sustainable
development as well as a human right (UNFPA, 2005).
Many international meetings of demographic and health professionals
continue to discuss and investigate improvements in reproductive health.
International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) (2004, p. 2) noted
that documents formulated at several international meetings--e.g. the
1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in
Cairo, the 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing--reflect a
global consensus on women's right to sexual and reproductive
health.
Reproductive health is the basis of a society's existence and
provides useful insights into a society's ability to replace itself
and future population growth. Future population growth has major
implications for planning for all sectors but more so health, education,
employment, housing and related areas of socio-economic development.
Reproductive health is also emerging as a useful indicator of
development. Following advances in medicine (preventative, diagnostic,
therapeutic and prognosis), Infant and maternal mortality have both
declined in almost every country. So much so that countries with high
infant and maternal mortality rates are considered undeveloped and vice
versa. Needless to say that reproductive health is closely associated
with sexual health, an important global health issue in this age of
HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis B & C, etc.
The importance of reproductive health can also be gauged from the
number of private agencies and international organizations contributing
to and providing services in reproductive health. Many international
organizations including IPPF, Population Services International (PSI),
the Population Council, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), World
Health Organization and other arms of the United Nations contribute
millions of US dollars annually to support reproductive health
activities. These organizations provide direct financial assistance to
many countries in Africa, the Caribbean, Asia and the South Pacific for
reproductive health activities.
Indeed, UNFPA (2005, p.1) adds that "investments in
reproductive health save and improve lives, slow the spread of HIV/AIDS
and encourage gender equality. These in turn help to stabilize
population growth...."
It is therefore becoming increasingly imperative for demographers,
epidemiologists and various other health specialists to take active
interest in and investigate patterns and trends in reproductive health
and, hence, the rational behind this study.
The purpose of this article is to examine reproductive health in
the Caribbean and the Gulf, identifying patterns, trends, similarities
and contradictions, with a view to throwing more light on the subject.
DATA AND METHODOLOGY
The data used in this study have been obtained from diverse sources
including published statistical data from relevant international
organizations as well as unpublished material at the websites of those
organizations (UN, UNFPA, IPPF etc). Some information was also obtained
from the Ministries of Health/Health Authorities in some of the
countries selected.
The methodology is an epidemiological analysis of the data obtained
for the various countries in the study. Six countries were randomly
selected for each of the Caribbean and Gulf Regions and reproductive
health data were obtained and analyzed for each of the selected
countries. The selected Caribbean countries were Cuba, Dominican
Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, Puerto Rico and Trinidad and Tobago. Iran,
Jordan, Kuwait, Syria, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Yemen were
selected for the Gulf Region.
RESULTS
The findings of the study are presented under broad headings of
contraceptive use and unintended pregnancy, total fertility and
adolescent fertility, births attended by skilled health professionals,
maternal mortality and health expenditure.
Fertility
Table 1 shows total fertility and adolescent fertility rates for
the study countries for the 22-year period from 1980 to 2002. It is
evident that both Regions have experienced declines in fertility,
consistent with the situation elsewhere (see Yeboah, 2001). The declines
have been more massive in the Islamic Gulf than in the Christian
Caribbean. Gulf countries such as Jordan, Kuwait and Syria recorded
larger declines, while the Caribbean countries only managed to
marginally reduce the already low total fertility rate. Sight should not
be lost of the fact that not all Gulf countries recorded sizeable
declines in fertility and that, in Yemen, there was only a slight
decline from 7.9 children per woman to 6.4 during the study period
(Table 1).
Contraceptive use and risk of pregnancy
The percentage of females aged 15-49 years using any form of
contraception is shown in table 2. It is evident from the table that
contraceptive prevalence among married women 15-49 years old was higher
for the Caribbean countries than the Gulf countries, albeit the
proportion was higher in the Islamic Iran than many Christian Caribbean
countries. The lowest contraceptive prevalence was 21% and the highest
was 78%, recorded in Yemen and Puerto Rico respectively.
Another finding was that, with the exception of Haiti, the
countries which provided information on the risk of unintended pregnancy
recorded low proportions. In Haiti, 48% of married women aged 15-49
years were at risk of unintended pregnancy during 1990-98, compared to
13% in the Dominican Republic and 22% in Jordan.
BIRTHS ATTENDED BY SKILLED HEALTH PROFESSIONALS AND MATERNAL
MORTALITY
Births attended by skilled health professionals and maternal
mortality ratios for the study countries during the study period are
presented in table 3. For those countries which provided information for
1982 and 1996-98, such as Haiti, Jamaica in the Caribbean and Syria and
the UAE in the Gulf, a higher proportion or births attended by skill
health staff was recorded in 1996-98 than in 1982. With the exception of
Haiti where the proportion actually declined from 34% to 25%, all the
other Caribbean countries in the study recorded higher proportions
during 1996-98 than in 1982. The pattern was by and large the same for
the Gulf countries. While Kuwait recorded no change (98% for both 1982
and 1996-98), Syria (43% in 1982 and 77% in 1996-98) and the UAE (94% in
1982 and 99% in 1996-98) made some progress. Haiti recorded the lowest
proportion of 25% both for the Caribbean and for all the study countries
and Yemen recorded the lowest proportion for the Gulf countries (43%).
Table 3 shows further that 5 of the 6 Caribbean countries recorded 92%
or higher proportion of births attended by skilled health professionals,
compared to only 3 Gulf countries during the same period. Cuba and
Puerto Rico (99% each), Trinidad and Tobago (98%), and Dominican
Republic (96%) recorded some of the highest proportions of births
attended by skilled health professionals in the Caribbean. The UAE
(99%), Kuwait (98%) and Jordan (97%) recorded the highest proportions of
births attended by skilled health professionals in the Gulf (Table 3).
With regards to maternal mortality ratio, the results were mixed
for both Regions. In the Caribbean, Puerto Rico and Cuba recorded
comparatively lower ratios of 21 and 36 per 100 000 live births, while
Haiti recorded the highest ratio of 910 per 100 000 live births in the
Caribbean. In the Gulf, Kuwait and the UAE recorded lower ratios of 20
and 25 per 100 000 population respectively, compared to 1400 per 100 000
population for Yemen.
HEALTH EXPENDITURE
The study found that total expenditure on health as a percentage of
GDP increased slightly for most of the study countries. With the
exception of Syria and the UAE in the Gulf and Trinidad and Tobago in
the Caribbean where a slight decrease was recorded, all the other 9
countries in the study increased the total expenditure on health as a
percentage of GDP during the 1997-2001 period. For example, total
expenditure on health as a percentage of GDP increased from 6.6 to 7.2,
5.8 to 6.1, 5.9 to 6.3 and 3.8 to 4.5 in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Iran
and Yemen respectively.
DISCUSSION
The whim of reproductive change taking place elsewhere in the world
has also occurred in both the Caribbean and the Gulf. In many parts of
the world, fertility and maternal mortality levels are declining (see,
for example, Yeboah, 2001). It is worthy to note from this study that,
even in the Islamic world where the existing institutions support high
fertility, some major declines in fertility have occurred. For example,
in Iran, total fertility rate declined by a massive 58.2%: Syria, Kuwait
and the UAE recorded 46%, 45.2% and 35.2% decline in the total fertility
rate respectively.
The norms, values and related religious and cultural institutions
in the Gulf encourage high fertility, partly manifest in legal and
religious provisions which allow males to have four wives and the
general belief that procreation is the essence of marriage (Ilkkaracan,
2000). Declining fertility in the Gulf may be attributable to increasing
female education and an emerging trend of young generation with a
tendency not to adhere strictly to the Islamic code of conduct. As noted
by Okasha (2003), the Islamic code of conduct describes the course of
action and acceptable behavior, but there is a growing trend of a new
young generation the members of which adhere less to this code than
their parental generation.
With regards to female education, more and more females are now in
the education system in the Gulf than at any other time, similar to the
situation in the Caribbean. In the UAE, a whole university has been
established for females only. Zayed University was established in 1998
to cater for the tertiary education needs of UAE female citizens and to
increase their employability, with inherent implication for lower
fertility. In the Caribbean, the University of the West Indies, the
region's foremost tertiary education institution, has more female
students than male students (Yeboah, 2004), with implications for delays
in marriages and procreation.
In many parts of the Gulf, female education and employment are
higher now than at any other time, albeit the levels are still
comparatively lower than those in western societies (Zuhur, 2003). While
female struggles for empowerment and freedom continue (Zuhur, 2002),
some improvements have been made. Females now have access to
contraceptives and are being appointed to various senior positions in
some countries, including a ministerial position in the UAE.
With the exception of Yemen (which recorded the highest adolescent
fertility rate), adolescent fertility rates were generally higher in the
Caribbean. The Islamic code of conduct and its associated strong
religious restrictions together with very harsh penalties for
fornication and adultery explain, to some extent, the lower level of
adolescent fertility in the Gulf countries. In many of these countries,
people are jailed for even kissing in public (Zuhur, 2003), and people
who engage in out-of-marriage sexual activity end up in jail. Yeboah
(2004), Green (2003) and Remez (1989) provided a synthesis of evidence
to demonstrate a culture of high promiscuity in the Caribbean, and hence
the difference in adolescent fertility between the two regions.
Again, cultural and religious factors explain the differences in
contraceptive use in the Caribbean and the Gulf. Contraceptive
prevalence is interestingly and unexpectedly high in Iran, where strict
Islamic laws and cultural practices prevail, albeit various types of
contraceptives are becoming increasingly available in the region. In
general, contraceptive prevalence is higher in the Caribbean because of
the right to choose and the unrestricted use of contraceptives as well
as the high development of family planning programs and services, ably
supported financially by Caribbean governments and international
organizations such as IPPF and UNFPA (Yeboah, 2001). With the emerging
trend in which the younger generation is seeking more freedom and
becoming less adherent to the Islamic code of conduct, contraceptive use
in the Gulf would most likely increase (Ilkkaracan, 2000).
Improvements in medicine, medical practice and service availability
(preventative, diagnostic and therapeutic) initially occurring in
western societies are now evident also in the Caribbean and the Gulf. A
substantial proportion of births in both Regions were attended by
skilled health professionals, with the Caribbean recording slightly
higher proportions than the Gulf. Both regions also recorded increases
in the proportion of births attended by skilled health professionals
from 1982 to 1996-98. With the exception of Haiti where the proportion
of births attended by skilled health professionals declined and Kuwait
where no change occurred, most other countries in the two Regions
recorded higher proportions in 1996-98 than in 1982. The decline in the
proportions in Haiti is attributable to the political situation in the
country and poverty.
During the 1990-97 period, Puerto Rico and Cuba recorded low
maternal mortality ratios in the Caribbean (21 and 36 per 100 000 live
births respectively) while, in the Gulf, Kuwait and the UAE recorded
maternal mortality rates of 20 and 26 per 100 000 respectively. These
compare favorably with a UNFPA estimated rate of 400 per 100 000 live
births globally in 2000. Indeed, the low maternal mortality ratio
recorded for the Caribbean countries and some Gulf countries appear
consistent with other studies. For example, UNFPA and the University of
Aberdeen (2005) reported that maternal mortality ratios are on average
the second lowest in the Caribbean and Latin America and only the
developed countries have lower rates.
The increasing proportion of births attended by skilled health
professionals has not manifested itself consistently in lower levels of
maternal mortality across all the study countries. Other factors, such
as good facilities and increasing female education, could have also made
a useful contribution. The point is that it would generally appear
logical that countries with higher proportions of births attended by
skilled health professionals will exhibit lower maternal mortality.
Supporting this position, UNFPA and University of Aberdeen (2005: 5)
stated that an inverse relationship exists between the proportion of
deliveries assisted by a skilled health professional and the mortality
ratio in developing countries, and that skilled delivery can protect
millions of babies and their mothers (see also WHO, 2005).
However, this thinking was vitiated in this study as some countries
did not conform to this statistical relationship. While Haiti's
higher maternal mortality ratio of 910 per 100 00 live births appears
logically consistent with the very low proportion of births attended by
skilled health professionals (only 25%), this potential consistency was
missing for the other Caribbean countries in the study.
Similarly, while the low maternal mortality rates for Kuwait and
the UAE (20 and 26 per 100 000 live births) appear logically consistent
with the higher proportion of births attended by skilled health
professionals (98% and 99% respectively), the situation in the Gulf was
not consistent for most of the other countries. Like Haiti, Yemen's
very high maternal mortality ratio of 1400 per 100 000 live births could
partly be attributed to the relatively low proportion of births attended
by skilled health professionals (43%).
The other notable factor contributing to improvements in maternal
mortality is female education. As stated earlier, throughout the Gulf,
female education is improving and this means that more and more females
are spending more time in the educational system. This practice has the
potential of delaying fertility and reducing the risk of pregnancy and
child birth and, thus, maternal mortality. Besides, educated females are
more likely to take good care of themselves and the pregnancy during the
gestational period and, thus, achieve lower maternal mortality.
It should further be noted that increasing expenditure on health
could have contributed to declining fertility and improvements in
maternal mortality. Evidence from the study indicates that most of the
study countries recorded increases in the total expenditure on health as
a percentage of GDP, and it appears logical that part of these increases
would be spent on reproductive health (see also WHO, 2005).
In sum, reproductive health is improving in the two regions, and is
evident in decreasing fertility and lower maternal mortality rates. Most
likely that this trend will continue as more and more females become
educated and participate in the labor force, and as government
expenditure on health continues to increase.
CONCLUSION
This study has provided some insights into reproductive health in
selected Caribbean and Gulf countries, demonstrating that the changes in
reproductive health taking place in other parts of the world are
emerging in both the Gulf and the Caribbean. While low fertility and
maternal mortality rates remained salient features in the developed
world for many years, this study found that many Caribbean and Gulf
countries were exhibiting these characteristics, traditionally
associated with the developed countries. This emerging feature, the
study noted, is attributable to improvements in medicine and medical
services, increasing proportion of births attended by skilled health
professionals, moderate increases in total expenditure on health as a
percentage of GDP and improving female participation in education and
the labor force.
It is the conclusion of this study that, while many factors could
have contributed to declining fertility, increasing contraceptive use
and risk of unintended pregnancy, cultural and religious factors explain
some of the differences between the Caribbean and the Gulf. The strong
affiliation and adherence to Islamic laws and religious practices in the
Gulf and the prevalence of Christianity and less restrictions on sexual
activity explain in part the patterns of reproductive health in the two
regions.
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David A. Yeboah teaches in the Health Sciences Program, Zayed
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TABLE 1. FERTILITY IN SELECTED CARIBBEAN AND GULF COUNTRIES, 1980-97
Country Total Fertility Rate Adolescent Fertility per
1000 women aged 15-49
1980 2002 1997
Cuba 2.0 1.6 65
Dominican 4.2 2.7 13
Republic
Haiti 5.9 4.0 70
Jamaica 3.7 2.4 104
Puerto Rico 2.6 1.9 69
Trinidad & 3.3 1.6 46
Tobago
Iran 6.7 2.8 50
Jordan 6.8 3.6 42
Kuwait 5.3 2.7 34
Syria 7.4 3.4 44
UAE 5.4 2.9 56
Yemen 7.9 7.0 105
Source: World Bank 1999, p. 98;; World Health Organization, 2005,
p. 112.
TABLE 2: CONTRACEPTIVE USE AND RISK OF UNINTENDED PREGNANCY, 1990-98
Country Contraceptive prevalence Women at risk of unintended
(% of Married women aged pregnancy (% of Married
15-49) women aged 15-49)
Cuba -- --
Dominican 64 13
Republic
Haiti 18 48
Jamaica 65 --
Puerto Rico 78 --
Trinidad & -- --
Tobago
Iran 73 --
Jordan 53 22
Kuwait -- --
Syria 40 --
UAE -- --
Yemen 21 --
Source: World Bank 1999, p. 98.
TABLE 3: BIRTHS ATTENDED BY SKILLED HEALTH STAFF AND
MATERNAL MORTALITY RATIO, SELECTED CARIBBEAN AND GULF
COUNTRIES, 1982-1998
Country Births attended by Maternal Mortality
skilled health professionals Ratio per 100 000
(% of total) live births
1982 1996-98 1990-97
Cuba -- 99 36
Dominican -- 96 110
Republic
Haiti 34 25 910
Jamaica 86 92 120
Puerto Rico -- 99 21
Trinidad & -- 98 90
Tobago
Iran -- 74 120
Jordan -- 97 150
Kuwait 98 98 20
Syria 43 77 180
UAE 94 99 26
Yemen -- 43 1400
Source: World Bank 1999, p. 98.
TABLE 4: HEALTH EXPENDITURE SELECTED CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES, 1997-2001
Country Total expenditure on health as a % of GDP
1997 1999 2001
Cuba 6.6 7.1 7.2
Dominican 5.8 5.7 6.1
Republic
Haiti 4.9 4.9 5.0
Jamaica 6.5 6.1 6.8
Puerto Rico -- -- --
Trinidad & 4.5 4.5 4.0
Tobago
Iran 5.9 6.5 6.3
Jordan 8.2 8.6 9.5
Kuwait 3.7 3.9 3.9
Syria 5.5 5.8 5.4
UAE 3.6 3.7 3.5
Yemen 3.8 4.0 4.5
Source: World Health Organization, 2005, pp. 138-140.