Engagements

Reducir para el 2022 el porcentaje de mujeres adolescentes que es madre o alguna vez ha estado embarazada a un 20% del total de mujeres adolescentes.
Lograr el acceso universal a servicios de salud sexual y reproductiva con enfoque de derechos en el curso de vida de la población hondureña, en respuesta a necesidades y prioridades como: violencia de género, planificación familiar, prevención del embarazo en adolescentes, VIH, sífilis y otras ITS entre otros, considerando los determinantes sociales de la salud.
India commits to make Universal Health Coverage a reality for all through increased coverage and funding through its Flagship Programme, ‘Ayushman Bharat’ (Healthy India), launched in 2018. The National Health Protection Scheme (called Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana, or PM-JAY) will cover 100 million poor and vulnerable families or 500 million Indians with a health cover of up to 7500 US dollars per family per year. Health and Wellness Centre is the second flagship programme under this scheme which will operationalize 1.5 lakh (0.15 million) centers that will provide comprehensive health care, including reproductive, maternal, child, neonatal and adolescent health services.
India commits to substantially reduce the unmet need for contraception by 2030 by increasing the range of contraceptives and improving the quality of family planning services. We commit to advocate voluntary and informed choice wherein couples can freely and responsibly decide the number and spacing of their children.
In order to fulfil and accelerate the ICPD promises, specifically, ending unmet need for family planning, ending preventable maternal death, and ending GBV and harmful practices, the Government of Indonesia is dedicated together to do the following commitment:
1. Developing synchronised policies, strategies, standardised quality of human resources and services to all, including women and girls so that no one is left behind;
2. Building budget commitment including integrated cost implementation plan of sub national government to adapt and implement the national policies and strategies;
3. Creating some innovations, including coordinated efforts, integrated data and approaches to overcome structural, social and cultural barriers.
Comprehensive sexual and reproductive health and rights:
1. Reduce maternal mortality by at least 50 % from 31 deaths per 100,000 live births to 15;
2. Integrate reproductive health issues into national policies and strategies;
3. Fulfill the unmet need for family planning and ensure access to modern contraception for all;
4. Increase health coverage of those in need, especially young people, from 54% currently to at least 90%.
Demographic diversity and Sustainable Development:
1. Monitoring and tracking the goals, targets and indicators related to population issues;
2. Directing programmes and activities that contribute to achieving the objectives determined in the annual plans of the sectoral ministries;
3. Emphasising on the integration of the ICPD based SDGs into development plans and sectoral strategies.
The Government of Ireland commits to reducing the gender gap in employment and the gender pay gap. The Government of Ireland commits to take action to support increased access to education, training and employment opportunities for social excluded women, particularly those living in poverty and Traveller and Roma women, to encouraging increased action by businesses on equality and diversity, and to provide support for female entrepreneurship, including in rural communities.
The Government of Ireland commits to strengthen our interventions to reach the furthest behind first in our international development co-operation. We will increase our focus in understanding key drivers of marginalisation and the needs of most marginalized groups in order to inform the implementation of our international development co-operation.
The Government of Ireland is committed to changing societal attitudes to domestic, sexual and gender-based violence, to improving services to survivors of violence, and holding perpetrators to account. We commit to adopting a whole of government approach to ending gender based violence through support for the implementation of the Second National Strategy on Domestic, Sexual and Gender-based Violence 2016-2021. We commit to collaboration between State agencies and the community and voluntary sectors to ensure the delivery of a successful strategy.
Ending gender-based violence is a priority for Ireland’s international development co-operation. We commit to intensifying our work on gender based violence and Women, Peace and Security. In particular, Ireland commits to prioritising preventing and responding to sexual and gender-based violence in peacekeeping and in response to emergencies.
Ireland believes that if Universal Health Coverage is to be genuinely universal, it should embrace all health services. As we collectively agreed in the Sustainable Development Goals this includes access to Sexual and Reproductive Health. This should to be of good quality, available, accessible and acceptable to all women and girls throughout their lives, free of stigma, discrimination, coercion and violence. The Irish Government’s new international development policy, A Better World, prioritises gender and equality and commits to a number of new initiatives in this area.