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Reprod Health. 2022 Jun 13;19(Suppl 1):56. doi: 10.1186/s12978-022-01329-6.
Ethiopia's government and civil society have driven crosscutting initiatives in the last 15 years to improve sexual and reproductive health outcomes, including passing a 2005 abortion law that facilitated reduced rates of maternal death due to unsafe abortion. However, both the government and nongovernmental organizations have relied on external funding for sexual and reproductive health and rights, particularly from the U.S. government, which has been Ethiopia's largest global health donor. This article explores how the implementation and expansion of the 2017-2021 U.S. foreign policy "Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance," also known as the Global Gag Rule-which attached itself to a nongovernmental organization's funding-impacted sexual and reproductive health and rights, including safe abortion care, in Ethiopia.
This article is based on research conducted by PAI staff in Ethiopia in 2018 with follow-up in 2019. PAI held in-depth semistructured interviews with representatives of 30 organizations in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa. Among these groups were U.S.-based and non-U.S. nongovernmental organizations, including community-based organizations, non-U.S. government donors, and Ethiopian government officials.
Nongovernmental organizations have been essential to sexual and reproductive health service provision and advocacy in Ethiopia. Because of the sector's reliance on U.S. global health assistance, these organizations; their activities; and, consequently, the wider health system were negatively impacted by the Global Gag Rule. Certain vulnerable groups, particularly adolescents and youth, have traditionally relied on the private sector for sexual and reproductive health services. PAI's research demonstrates that U.S. policy disrupted activities and service delivery, threatened the closure of private clinics, stalled mobile outreach, and impacted safe abortion training of health personnel. Additionally, the Global Gag Rule dismantled partnerships, affected non-U.S. government donors' investments, and caused confusion that limited activities permissible under the policy.
The Trump administration's Global Gag Rule forced non-U.S. organizations to choose between providing comprehensive care or losing U.S. global health assistance, ultimately impacting populations in need of services. Ethiopia provides a clear example of how the Global Gag Rule can threaten a country's domestic health agenda by targeting nongovernmental organizations that are vital to health service delivery and safe abortion care.
在过去的 15 年里,埃塞俄比亚政府和民间社会推动了贯穿各领域的倡议,以改善性健康和生殖健康成果,包括通过了 2005 年的堕胎法,这降低了因不安全堕胎导致的孕产妇死亡率。然而,政府和非政府组织都依赖外部资金来提供性健康和生殖健康及权利,特别是来自美国政府的资金,美国一直是埃塞俄比亚最大的全球卫生捐助者。本文探讨了 2017-2021 年美国外交政策“在全球卫生援助中保护生命”(也称为全球套禁令)的实施和扩大如何影响埃塞俄比亚的性健康和生殖健康及权利,包括安全堕胎护理,该禁令附加于一个非政府组织的资金上。
本文基于 PAI 工作人员 2018 年在埃塞俄比亚进行的研究,并于 2019 年进行了跟进。PAI 在埃塞俄比亚首都亚的斯亚贝巴与 30 个组织的代表进行了深入的半结构化访谈。这些团体包括美国和非美国的非政府组织,包括基于社区的组织、非美国政府捐助者和埃塞俄比亚政府官员。
非政府组织在埃塞俄比亚的性健康服务提供和宣传方面发挥了重要作用。由于该部门依赖美国的全球卫生援助,这些组织、它们的活动以及更广泛的卫生系统受到了全球套禁令的负面影响。某些弱势群体,特别是青少年和青年,传统上依赖私营部门获得性健康服务。PAI 的研究表明,美国政策扰乱了活动和服务提供,威胁到私营诊所的关闭,使流动外展停滞不前,并影响了卫生人员的安全堕胎培训。此外,全球套禁令破坏了伙伴关系,影响了非美国政府捐助者的投资,并造成了混乱,限制了政策允许的活动。
特朗普政府的全球套禁令迫使非美国组织在提供全面护理或失去美国全球卫生援助之间做出选择,最终影响到需要服务的人群。埃塞俄比亚提供了一个明确的例子,说明全球套禁令如何通过针对对卫生服务提供和安全堕胎护理至关重要的非政府组织来威胁一个国家的国内卫生议程。