Thank you for the question. As I understood it, you want to understand what we're doing to address gaps in access to sexual and reproductive health services and, in particular, to family planning.
We are a research and policy organization. All of our work is through partnerships. We are always following the lead of our country partners, whether they be researchers or advocates. What do they see as the priorities for evidence generation, policy and advocacy within their own countries? We follow a country-led approach.
What we see is this: The countries that have the highest rates of unintended pregnancy are often also those that restrict contraceptive access and have higher rates of abortion. The restriction of abortion often goes hand in hand with lack of access to family planning services. Make those available, so people can prevent those pregnancies.
One thing I want to touch on is this: It's not just about access alone. I thought Lucy Akello touched on an important point around contraceptive side effects. We see women reporting that as one of the reasons for not using methods of contraception. It's about access and the methods available to them. They always need to have free and informed choice on a range of methods available at a place near them, in their communities.
That should always be how we put forward contraceptive programming. We often interpret the gaps as being just about access. Access is a huge part of it. Financing is a huge part of it, but it's also about information. That's where comprehensive sexuality education comes in. People need to understand what is available to them and what those services are.
There's a range of steps we need to take. Where Canada can step in is on the financing side to support advocates who are pushing, within their countries, to expand access to services in order to ensure there is comprehensive sexuality education with the full comprehensive package of services provided.