Dakar, Senegal, Sept 3, - Dr
Thabo Matsaseng, Fertility expert at the headquarters of the World Health
Organisation (WHO) has said that tubal blockade and damages resulting from
caesarean section surgeries are compounding the risks factors of infertility in
women.
He said scientific evidence shows
that scars of caesarean sections, not the only risk factor, though, of
infertility was posing greater threat to infertility in women, which needed to
be addressed through simple strategies of post-partum follow-ups.
Dr Matsaseng said these at the
side event of “Development and Implementation of Integrated and Affordable
Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART) in the African Region,” as part of the
68th WHO-AFRO Regional Committee session in Dakar, Senegal.
He said more than 186 million
ever-married women aged between 15-49, in developing countries were infertile,
due to primary or secondary infertility, with women bearing the brunt of the
inability to conceive, when infertility affects both men and women.
The Fertility Expert said
one-in-every-four persons in the African region are infertile with over 50%
affecting men, saying sexually transmitted infections and unsafe abortions were
other causes.
“Infertility is perceived by many
in Sub Saharan Africa as a paradox in family planning and needed to be
promoted,”
Dr Matsaseng said evidence available
shows that there are enough information and services on family planning for
young people to consume but the fear for infertility and sterility distances
them from these services, and entreated that a comprehensive sexuality
education was waged to assuage their predicament.
He fears the targets set in the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), that borders on reproductive health and
sexuality, including infections, infertility and HIV, could jeopardize the
attainment of the 2030 deadline target, like was the case in the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), suspecting that a different target of 2060 was
eminent, if these issues remained unattended.
Dr Matsaseng announced that the
WHO in the next year or so, has pledged to release guidelines on diagnosis,
prevention and treatment of infertility for both men and women, stating that,
“The work is in progress and hopes to deliver this guidelines that will set
norms and standards.”
Professor Oladapo Aderenle
Ashiru, President of the African Fertility Society said ART has evolved in
Africa with Nigeria leading the pact with the emergence of its first in-vitro
fertilization (IVF) baby in 1989 and later Ghana, in 1995, stating that
currently there were 150 fertility clinics operational on the continent.
He said the Society has chalked
some successes, including discovering pre-implantation genetic testing
mechanism for sickle cell patients to have babies, low dose IVF processes and
vaginal incubator technology to facilitate planting fertilized eggs in a
woman’s womb to carry.
Prof Ashiru said nutritional
toxins emanating from fish contaminated with high metals like mercury, chemical
residues from fruits and vegetables, in addition to women driving with bare
foot may attract metals and consequently suffer infertility.
Dr Rasha Kelej, Chief Executive
of Merck Foundation and President of “Merck More Than A Mother,” said Merck was
working tirelessly to break the barriers of culture, stigma and poverty, which
impugn fertility issues in the society and urging the media to raise the
awareness in these matters to promote comprehensive sexuality education.
She called for consensus building
to address infertility in the African region as part of the universal access to
reproductive health and rights.
Mrs Sarah Achieng Opendi, Ugandan
Minister of Health and General Duties, noted that, fertility care clinics are
privately owned and services are expensive for the ordinary people and
therefore called on African governments to support the legion of infertile men
and women and craft legislations to regulate the services.
She asked men to drop egos and
access fertility services since evidence abounds that not every semen carries
sperm, a vital stock in making a woman pregnant.
GNA

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