This story is part one of a three-part series on how social and economic inequalities impact cancer treatment. The second and third installments will take a closer look at how low- and middle-income countries in the Middle East and Latin America are coping with their cancer burdens and employing multiple strategies to stem the epidemic.
A patient being treated at the Regional Cancer Centre in Thiruvananthapuram, India. Credit: K.S. Harikrishnan/IPS
UNITED NATIONS, Apr 9 2014 (IPS) – Few people in the world can claim to be untouched by cancer. If not personally battling it in one form or another, millions are at this very moment sitting beside loved ones fighting for th…
Nasreen Jehan, a high school student in eastern India, studies a leaflet on menstrual hygiene. Credit: Stella Paul/IPS
BETTIAH, India, May 28 2014 (IPS) – Fifteen-year-old Nasreen Jehan, a student in the eastern Indian state of Bihar, proudly flaunts a yellow and red beaded bracelet encircling her wrist. This humble accessory, she tells IPS, is her most treasured possession.
“It helps me keep track of my menstrual calendar,” says the 9th-grader, who attends a government-run, all-girls school in a town called Bettiah. “Also, it helps me talk about menstruation with my friends.”
Of the 24 small beads that comprise the delicate adornment, six are …
This is part of a series of special stories on world population and challenges to the Sustainable Development Goals on the occasion of World Population Day on July 11.
Most South Asian nations struggle with the twin problems of early marriage and teenage pregnancy, making it crucial to tackle both simultaneously, experts say. Credit: Zofeen Ebrahim/IPS
KARACHI, Pakistan, Jul 11 2014 (IPS) – If 22-year-old Rashda Naureen could go back six years in time, she would never have agreed to get married at the tender age of 16.
Looking back, I know I was not ready for marriage,” she told IPS. “How could I have been, being merely a child myself?”
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In India, 27 percent of women aged 20-49 were married before they were 15 years old. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar/IPS
NEW DELHI, Aug 20 2014 (IPS) – Basanti Rani*, a 33-year-old farmers’ wife from the northern Indian state of Haryana, recently withdrew her 15-year-old daughter Paru from school in order to marry her off to a 40-year-old man.
“In an increasingly insecure social milieu, where rape and sexual abuse have become so common, marrying off my daughter was a wise move,” she told IPS.
“Who would’ve married her had she been abused or raped? Now, at least, her husband can look after her.”
Such a mindset, widespread across this …
In this column, Mario Lubetkin, Director of Corporate Communications at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), writes that the U.N. organisation’s annual report on the state of food insecurity released on Sep. 16 attracted great media attention but lacked analytical coverage. Publication of statistics on hunger, he says, should not be seen as a single event but can only be understood as part a process of change with multiple, public and private stakeholders.
ROME, Oct 3 2014 (IPS) – It is common belief that good news is less interesting for the general public than bad news; this is why media coverage tends to focus on catastrophic events and disasters, both natural and man-made.
Fortunately, there are some exceptions: a report launched by the Food and Agricul…
Gender inequalities drive the disproportionate rate of HIV infection among young South African women aged 15 to 24. Credit: Mercedes Sayagues/IPS
JOHANNESBURG, Dec 1 2014 (IPS) – When she found out that she had human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), Thabisile Mkhize (not her real name) was scared.
She knew little about the virus that had been living in her body since birth and did not know whom to ask. Her mother had just died and she lived with her grandmother in rural KwaZulu Natal, where the HIV prevalence is the , at 17 percent.
Today, at the age of 16, Mkhize is an enthusiastic peer educator at her school, discussing HIV prevention, safe sex and sexua…
Women in India’s mental health institutions often face systematic abuse that includes detention, neglect and violence. Credit: Shazia Yousuf/IPS
MUMBAI, Jan 30 2015 (IPS) – Following the birth of her third child, Delhi-based entrepreneur Smita* found herself feeling “disconnected and depressed”, often for days at a stretch. “Much later I was told it was severe post-partum depression but at the time it wasn’t properly diagnosed,” she told IPS.
“My marriage was in trouble and after my symptoms showed no signs of going away, my husband was keen on a divorce, which I was resisting.”
“The nurses were unkind and cruel. I remember one…
Serra Sippel is President of the Center for Health and Gender Equity (CHANGE)
WASHINGTON, Mar 18 2015 (IPS) – Earlier this month, President Barack Obama delivered an impassioned speech marking the 50th Anniversary of the civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama and the bloody attack on civil rights marchers by police.
President Obama issued what was tantamount to a call to action for Americans to speak out for what is right. He stated: Loving this country requires more than singing its praises or avoiding uncomfortable truths. It requires the occasional disruption, the willingness to speak out for what s right and shake up the status quo.
Sandra Siagian interviews BABATUNDE OSOTIMEHIN, executive director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)
Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla and UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin discussed how Indonesia could harness its demographic dividend on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum on East Asia in Jakarta on Apr. 20. Credit: Courtesy of UNFPA Indonesia.
JAKARATA, May 2 2015 (IPS) – In a populous archipelago nation like Indonesia, where 250 million live spread across some 17,500 islands, speaking over 300 languages, the question of development is a tricky one.
A lower-middle-income country with a poverty rate of 11.4 percent – …
The northern town of Buka was the focus of attention when the newly elected third Autonomous Bougainville Government was inaugurated on Jun. 15. Credit: Catherine Wilson/IPS
CANBERRA, Australia, Jun 24 2015 (IPS) – A referendum on independence within the next five years dominated campaigning in the recent general election held in Bougainville, an autonomous region of 300,000 people in the east of Papua New Guinea (PNG), which emerged from a decade-long civil war 15 years ago.
John Momis, a former Catholic priest who has been prominent in national politics for more than 40 years, was re-elected as president, acquiring 51,382 votes, well ahead…