Kenyas promovering af nødprævention kræver mere uddannelse om beskyttelse mod HIV

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NAIROBI, 10 November 2009 – Three years after the Kenyan government began to promote emergency contraception as part of its family planning strategy, the “morning-after pill” remains as controversial as ever: critics argue that unless the public is better educated about its purpose, it risks undermining the messages of abstinence and protected sex, putting impressionable young people at risk of HIV.

“When you speak to young girls and the youth, they confide that unwanted pregnancy rings more in their minds than the possibility of contracting venereal diseases or HIV,” said Anne Muisyo, coordinator of the Abstinence and Worth the Wait programme at Crisis Pregnancy Ministries. “It is the very reason I have qualms about a campaign telling people to relax because there is a pill they can run to after engaging in unprotected sex.”

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