Family planning
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
Related e |
Featured: |
Family planning services are defined as "educational, comprehensive medical or social activities which enable individuals, including minors, to determine freely the number and spacing of their children and to select the means by which this may be achieved". Family planning may involve consideration of the number of children a woman wishes to have, including the choice to have no children, as well as the age at which she wishes to have them. These matters are influenced by external factors such as marital situation, career considerations, financial position, any disabilities that may affect their ability to have children and raise them, besides many other considerations. If sexually active, family planning may involve the use of contraception and other techniques to control the timing of reproduction. Other techniques commonly used include sexuality education, prevention and management of sexually transmitted infections, pre-conception counseling and management, and infertility management. Family planning as defined by the United Nations and the World Health Organization encompasses services leading up to conception and does not promote abortion as a family planning method, although levels of contraceptive use reduces the need for abortion.
Family planning is sometimes used as a synonym or euphemism for access to and the use of contraception. However, it often involves methods and practices in addition to contraception. Additionally, there are many who might wish to use contraception but are not, necessarily, planning a family (e.g., unmarried adolescents, young married couples delaying childbearing while building a career); family planning has become a catch-all phrase for much of the work undertaken in this realm. Contemporary notions of family planning, however, tend to place a woman and her childbearing decisions at the center of the discussion, as notions of women's empowerment and reproductive autonomy have gained traction in many parts of the world. It is most usually applied to a female-male couple who wish to limit the number of children they have and/or to control the timing of pregnancy (also known as spacing children).
See also
- Life planning
- Natural family planning
- natalism and antinatalism
- Parental leave
- POPLINE (World's largest reproductive health database)
- Sex selection
- Human overpopulation
- Birth in Sri Lanka
- Women in Bolivia
- Birth in Benin
- Abortion in Panama
- Opata people
- Pledge two or fewer (campaign for smaller families)
- Reproductive coercion
International organizations
- International Planned Parenthood Federation
- Marie Stopes International
- Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition
National organizations
- British Pregnancy Advisory Service
- Family Planning Association (UK)
- Family Planning Association India
- Family Planning Association of Hong Kong
- German Foundation for World Population (DSW)
- National Alliance for Optional Parenthood (USA)
- Planned Parenthood (USA)