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Article Archive for February, 2011

GUTTMACHER INSTITUTE LAUNCHES NEW INTERNATIONAL DATA CENTER

Monday, February 28th, 2011


Allows Users to Create Customized Tables,
Graphs and Maps With the Most Current Data Available from
75 countries and 22 world regions

The Guttmacher Institute announces the launch of its new International Data Center. This new tool allows researchers, advocates, policymakers, journalists and others working on reproductive health issues at the international level to build, download and print custom tables, graphs and maps using the most current information available from a wide range of countries and regions.
The International Data Center includes country and regional level data, which the user can compare and customize to meet his or her needs. The available data include

· safe and unsafe abortion rates;
· intended and unintended pregnancy rates;
· maternal health care provision;
· contraceptive use and unmet need for family planning; and
· reproductive health indicators for adolescents.

It is an easy-to-use tool that allows the user to find, display, download or print information and to:

· create tables, comparing up to 10 measures, for up to 75 countries or 22 world regions;
· map indicators related to adolescents, contraception and pregnancy across countries; and
· generate country profiles of all available indicators.

Click here for a tutorial on how to use the new and improved Guttmacher International Data Center.

Country Profiles for Population and Reproductive Health

Monday, February 28th, 2011

Thanks to Bob Wyman for alerting me to the fact that the article PMC distributed yesterday on UN Population Division projections links to a report from 2004.  NOTE: While the article is recent, the projections it refers to are not!

At http://zunia.org/post/country-profiles-for-population-and-reproductive-health/ you can download a very useful UNFPA/PRB publication, Country Profiles for Population and Reproductive Health.

This volume contains more than more than 100 demographic and health indicators from developing countries, including information for tracking progress on the ICPD and Millennium Development Goals. It also includes brief overviews of the country’s situation with regard to population and health issues, and relevant policy developments. Regional overviews and indicators are provided as well.
The report covers basic demographic trends, as well as social and economic indicators, and statistics on maternal and child health, adolescent reproductive health, education, HIV and AIDS, gender equality and demand for reproductive health services. It also tracks internal disparities and public financing for health and education, and maps progress toward meeting the MDGs. Technical notes detail the data sources for key indicators and provide guidance for the interpretation of the statistics.

http://www.unfpa.org/webdav/site/global/shared/documents/publications/2010/countryprofiles_2010_en.pdf

UN’s world population estimates raise questions on sustainability

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

Thanks to Joe Bish for this article.  At http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/301443 you can hear an interview with Hania Zlotnik, head of the UN Population Division, regarding recent population projections out as far as 2300.  You can download the Population Division’s recent report showing assumptions behind various projections via a link in the article below.

UN’s world population estimates raise questions on sustainability
Dec 14, 2010 by ■ Michael Krebs

With population estimates from the United Nations ranging anywhere from 8 billion to 10.5 billion by 2050, there is a need to understand the numbers and the implications of population growth or decline.

As human population figures worldwide are continuing to reflect widespread growth, the United Nations recently released a 240-page report that examines and projects trends over a wide period of time from 1950 to 2300. By 2050, according the UN Population Division analysis, there could be anywhere from 8 billion of us at the low end of the projection to 10.5 billion at the high end.

The impact of these figures on ecological sustainability is not known.

The United Nations has been assessing global populations since the 1950s. As the world settled into a relative postwar tranquility, populations began to expand – and this expansion prompted the UN to begin implementing family planning measures where appropriate.

“The United Nations has a very long history of leading the discussion of population issues at the world level,” UN Population Division Director Hania Zlotnik said. “It started in the 50′s. It culminated in the 70′s with the first intergovernmental conference on population – the 1974 World Population Conference – where governments got together and for the first time they legitimized at the universal level the fact that governments could make policies regarding population and specifically that they had a responsibility to enable couples and individuals to have the number of children they desired – specifically by the rise in family planning programs. And it’s that movement of family planning that has had a major impact on world population trends.”

Read the full article here: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/301443#ixzz1BD7KmqBs

Bill Ryerson Interviews

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

You can view a half-hour interview with PMC President William Ryerson by Fran Stoddard of Vermont Public Television’s Profile at http://video.vpt.org/video/1750675385.  It was taped on January 7, 2011 and broadcast on January 17 and 23 of 2011o.

On January 31, Mr. Ryerson did a five-minute interview on the VT local CBS affiliate.  You can see it here: http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?S=13942525

OPT: We must address resource demand as well as supply

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

NEWS RELEASE

Thursday 13 January 2011 – For immediate release

We must address resource demand as well as supply

The Optimum Population Trust welcomes the recent report by the Institute of Mechanical Engineers “Population: One Planet, Too Many people?”

We endorse the Institute’s view that “Population increase is likely to be the defining challenge of the 21st Century, a global issue that will affect us all whether or not the countries in which we reside become more crowded or not.” We share the Institute’s concern about the need to ensure that resources can meet demand; in particular, food, water, urbanisation and energy; and that “failure to act will place billions of people around the world at risk of hunger, thirst and conflict as capacity tries to keep up with demand”. And we fully support approaches that will develop and spread the sustainable uses of technology.

We have four main criticisms of the report and of how it is being interpreted.

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Population Explosion: Can the Planet Cope?

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Thanks to Scott Connolly for this population report by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.  See http://www.imeche.org/news/archives/11-01-12/Population_Explosion_Can_the_Planet_Cope.aspx

World pressured by population growth – but Engineering Development Goals hold the key.

NEWS RELEASE

Wednesday 12 January 2011

A groundbreaking Population report (Wed 12 January) by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) has revealed the world is hurtling towards population overload placing billions at risk of hunger, thirst and slum conditions.

Population: One planet, too many people? is the first report of its kind by the engineering profession.  Unless the engineering solutions highlighted in the report are urgently implemented then the projected 2.5 billion more people on earth by the end of this Century (currently there is 6.9 billion) will crush the earth’s resources.

Urbanisation will soar. ‘Mega-cities’ of more than 10 million people will rise to 29 by 2025 and the urban population will increase from 3.3billion (2007) to 6.4 billion (2050).  Food will also become an increasingly precious commodity and developed areas such as the UK will be forced to stamp out its ‘throwaway’ lifestyle. Water consumption will increase by 30% by 2030 and there is projected to be a 50% hike in water extraction for industrial use in Asia. This, the report states, could create civil unrest and land battles for resources  as climate change looms.

For the full article navigate to: http://www.imeche.org/news/archives/11-01-12/Population_Explosion_Can_the_Planet_Cope.aspx

Social change drama on air today

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

The National – Tuesday, February 22, 2011
http://www.thenational.com.pg/?q=node/16777

Listeners of the family show on FM 100 will have more to live, love and laugh about when the two new serial dramas on social change are aired live for the first time tonight and will continue every Tuesday and Thursday at 8.30pm.

The series would have a two-year run with the Tok Pisin series “Nau em taim” and English series “Echoes of change” would follow in three storyline segments.
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Colorado Filmmakers Explore Overpopulation and Women’s Rights

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

By: Brendon Bosworth
http://www.newwest.net/topic/article/colorado_filmmakers_explore_overpopulation/C37/L37/

A new documentary that debuted at the Boulder International Film Festival calls overpopulation a looming and underreported issue.

Directed and produced by Denver-based Tiroir A Films, “Mother: Caring Our Way Out of the Population Dilemma” confronts what it labels a social, political and religious taboo – rapid population growth – and its role in natural resource depletion and economic inequality.

Pointing to the United Nations’ projection of a world population of 9 billion by 2045, the film calls for a more responsible approach to reproduction and the promotion of a global culture of female empowerment and respect for women’s rights. It features commentary by population scholars, economists, authors and scientists, including the outspoken Paul Ehrlich, author of 1968 book “The Population Bomb,” which has been criticized for its predictions of global famine in the 1970s.
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Ask Umbra on Population

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

Thanks to Jennifer Prediger for a link to the “Ask Umbra” column on Grist (http://www.grist.org/column/ask-umbra).  On that page, you will find this lead into an article on population:

Overpopulation is a big theme in Umbra’s latest Book Club selection, Freedom. We’ve got exclusive Grist video of author Jonathan Franzen talking about the issue. Why isn’t everyone else talking about it? Do you worry about 220,000 new people being added to the planet every day? Tell us what you think, whether you’ve read the book or not.

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Make Birth Control Available at No Cost

Monday, February 21st, 2011

Make birth control Available at No Cost
By Cheryl Gibson. Wednesday, January 19, 2011

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the approval of the birth control pill. Yet for millions of women in this country, the price is just too high, making birth control simply out of reach.

Fortunately, a provision in the new health care law may allow all FDA-approved prescription contraception to be fully covered by new health plans. Simply put, that means that women may not need to find cash co-pays or out-of-pocket payments for prescription birth control. Under the new health care law, health insurance plans will be required to fully cover women’s preventive health care services without requiring any co-pays. Over the next year, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will decide which benefits will be covered at no cost for women.
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