Type | Report |
Title | Challenges and opportunities for male involvement in reproductive health in Cambodia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
URL | http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PNADD199.pdf |
Abstract | Increasingly, recognition is growing on a global scale that the involvement of men in reproductive health (RH) policy and service delivery offers both men and women important benefits. Cambodia has acknowledged these benefits and is one of the first nations to promote male involvement at the policy and service implementation levels. Involving men in reproductive healthcare could help Cambodia achieve some major development goals, such as a decreased maternal mortality rate and an increased contraceptive prevalence rate. Involving men could also help reduce the overall prevalence of HIV/AIDS—an outcome possible only if men are involved not just as clients of RH care but also as partners, service providers, policymakers, teachers, and project managers. Until today, male involvement in RH in Cambodia has been relatively underdeveloped. Despite the availability of a few contraceptive methods for men, maternal and child health (MCH) programs provide most RH care, strategic plans and services lack indicators for men, and most service providers are not equipped or trained to accommodate male clients. RH facilities tend to be female-oriented; as a result, men are often reluctant to avail themselves of services. Men’s reluctance to access RH care can also mean that barriers to accessing health, such as distance and cost, which affect both men and women, are even more influential in preventing men from seeking RH counseling or treatment or even seeking services as partners. Gender differences in Cambodian society appear to have a profound effect on male involvement in reproductive health, which is usually assumed to be a woman’s concern—at the household, service provision, and policy levels. Cultural expectations also make it difficult for women to discuss RH issues with men. |
» | Cambodia - Socio-Economic Survey 1997 |