Op-Ed: It’s time to permanently repeal the ‘global gag rule’

by Caitlin Horrigan (PPFA) and Marie-Evelyne Petrus Barry (Regional Director for IPPF Africa Regional Office)

Assorted contraceptives in Mozambique. Photo by: Ricardo Franco / CDC / CC BY

In January 2021, the global health, human rights, and gender equity communities waited with bated breath for U.S. President Joe Biden to keep his election promises and repeal the harmful Mexico City Policy, also known as the “global gag rule.”

The devastating policy had been radically expanded under former President Donald Trump to bar international recipients of any U.S. global health funding from using their own funds to provide abortion care or to engage in counseling, referrals, or advocacy related to it. This version of the global gag rule restricted partnership on roughly $12 billion and impacted a range of lifesaving health care services worldwide, including those related to HIV, maternal health and nutrition, sexually transmitted infections, and vulnerable children.

The flip-flopping of U.S. foreign policy with each presidential party change has played politics with the health and lives of people across the globe for nearly 40 years.

Perhaps most unfair is the intrinsic neocolonialism of the policy, disproportionately impacting Black and brown women and girls in low-income countries with already limited access to high-quality health services, including safe abortion care. For example, while Africa accounts for 29% of all unsafe abortions, “it sees 62% of all abortion-related deaths,” according to the World Health Organization.

Marie-Evelyne Petrus.barry, Regional Director for IPPF Africa Regional Office

January 2022 marked one year since Biden rescinded this harmful and unfair policy. Still, while rescinding is a positive first step, the looming threat of reinstatement under future anti-rights administrations continues to undermine the sustainability of global health programs and the pace of progress. More than this, the devastating consequences of the global gag rule do not simply go away.

Research from 26 African countries found that during former President George W. Bush’s administration, the global gag rule eroded access to vital sexual and reproductive health care, leading to a 14% reduction in modern contraception use and a staggering 40% rise in abortions among countries highly affected by the policy. Many of these abortions were likely to be unsafe, with potential consequences including lifelong disabilities or even death.

Under Trump’s reinstatement of the global gag rule, Ugandan health facilities with more exposure to the policy supported an average of four fewer community health workers than facilities with less exposure to the rule. Such gaps have decreased access to family planning services and the crosscutting health services delivered alongside them.

With approximately 218 million women in low- and middle-income countries having an unmet need for family planning and tens of millions of unsafe abortions already performed each year, the sharp decline in sexual and reproductive health care under the global gag rule only adds to disastrous yet sadly preventable outcomes.

For the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the global gag rule under Trump meant losing critical support from the U.S. government, impacting 53 health care projects across 32 countries. In some member associations, service delivery decreased by up to 42% from 2016 to 2017, and it will take years to build back to the same capacity.

Horrigan, C., & Barry, M. (2022). Opinion: It’s time to permanently repeal the ‘global gag rule’. Retrieved 4 March 2022, from

https://www.devex.com/news/opinion-it-s-time-to-permanently-repeal-the-global-gag-rule-102713

Posted in Front Page, News Archive

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