|

|
[back to
articles]What Mexican Women Want
By Steven W. Mosher
The
Mexican government, as
we have previously
reported, is
aggressively seeking to
drive down the nation's
birthrate to below
replacement. Young
mothers who come to
government-run clinics
and hospitals to deliver
their babies are
pressured to accept
either sterilization or
an IUD. This abusive
program was formulated
by Mexico's National
Population Council (CONAPO)
in consultation with the
U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA),
which continues to fund
it today. [1]
This program, rather
disingenuously referred
to as "reproductive
health care," is
arguably the Ministry of
Health's top priority.
It is more generously
funded and vigorously
pursued than other forms
of health care, such as
those addressing
HIV/AIDS or sexually
transmitted diseases.
The
question we asked
ourselves was this: How
do the health priorities
of ordinary Mexican
women compare with those
of the government? Do
women support the
government's anti-natal
agenda, or do they see
other health needs as
more pressing?
To
answer this question we
carried out a survey of
the health needs of
women-as they themselves
perceived these-in the
Mexican city of
Guadalajara. Who wants
reproductive health
care? Not the women of
Mexico, it turns out.
Guadalajara, located in
the western part of the
central highlands, is
Mexico's second city.
It is home to some 4
million people. It is a
transportation and
marketing hub. Several
major highways, carrying
national and
international heavy
transport, as well as
almost everything else,
traverse the city. The
residents are small
shop-owners and
tradesmen, mechanics and
other service
providers. Television
and telephones, both
conventional and
cellular, are widely
available. Most of the
inhabitants have
received some education,
and literacy rates are
high. Like Mexicans in
general, the residents
of Guadalajara are
religious, with about
90% identifying
themselves as Catholics,
and the rest adhering to
various Protestant
sects.
A
total of 370 women were
interviewed by one of
ten trained interviewers
in different districts
of the city. The
interviewers went
door-to-door in their
respective districts.
[2] Those interviewed
were shown a list of 15
different public health
programs, and asked to
order the list in terms
of their own personal
needs, putting their
most pressing need first
and their least
important need last.
The health programs
listed were Reproductive
Health, [3]
vaccinations, HIV/AIDS,
Family and Child Abuse,
Natural Family Planning,
Sexually Transmitted
Diseases, Lifestyle,
Maternal and Neonatal,
Potable Drinking Water
and Sewage,
Psychological, Cholera,
Diarrhea, Tuberculosis,
Malaria, and Leprosy.
Other information
collected included age,
religion, marital
status, and prior
history of
contraception,
sterilization, and
abortion.
The
date on health needs
reported by respondents
was entered into a
database and the mean
rank order was
calculated for each
category of health
care. The lower the
rank order for a
particular kind of
health care, the greater
the need for such health
care expressed by the
respondents. The
results are shown in
Table 1.
|
Health need
followed by mean
rank order |
|
|
|
Vaccinations |
5.13 |
|
HIV/AIDS |
5.32 |
|
Family & Child
Abuse |
5.32 |
|
Natural Family
Planning (NFP) |
5.82 |
|
Sexually
Transmitted
Diseases (STDs) |
6.24 |
|
Lifestyle |
6.26 |
|
Maternal &
Neonatal |
7.30 |
|
Potable Drinking
Water & Sewage |
7.98 |
|
Psychological |
8.88 |
|
Cholera |
9.18 |
|
Diarrhea |
9.44 |
|
Tuberculosis |
9.83 |
|
Malaria |
10.28 |
|
Leprosy |
10.67 |
|
Reproductive
Health |
12.02 |
|
|
|
Table 1:
Desirability of
Health Programs
in Mexico: Note
that the higher
the mean rank
order, the more
desired the
programs are in
the view of the
respondents. |
What do these modern
Mexicans have to say
about their health care
needs?
They list their most
pressing concerns as
Vaccinations, HIV/AIDS
Prevention, Child and
Family Abuse, and NFP.
Now Vaccinations are
needed to prevent such
diseases as
Tuberculosis, Measles,
and polio, while
HIV/AIDS needs no
explanation. Because of
Mexico's machismo
culture, family and
child abuse remains a
difficult problem. The
only mild surprise in
this cluster of
top-ranked health needs
is the presence of
Natural Family Planning,
or NFP, which was
welcomed by many
respondents as a safe
and natural means of
regulating their
fertility, a point to
which I will return in a
moment.
Second-order health
needs listed by the
women interviewees
include sexually
transmitted diseases, or
STDs; lifestyle
diseases, primarily
alcohol- and
drug-related
problems; maternal and
neonatal health care;
and potable drinking
water and sewage
treatment programs. The
problems of STDs,
alcohol addiction and
drug addiction are
another aspect of
Mexico's culture. The
relatively high ranking
of maternal and neonatal
health care can be read
as a cry for help on the
part of mothers whose
"reproductive health
care" consists of a
tubal ligation or IUD
insertion following
delivery. Mexicans are
also aware that polluted
drinking water, not to
mention the lack of
proper sewage treatment
facilities, is a vector
for the transmission of
dysentery and other
diseases, and so would
like to see the water
supply made safe. All
in all, the Mexican
health problems given
priority by the women
are commonly recognized
as such by outside
observers, confirming
the good judgment of
those we surveyed.
The
health problems that
follow--Psychological
problems, Cholera,
Tuberculosis, Malaria,
and Leprosy--although
not affecting the large
percentage of the
population that, say,
Family and Child Abuse
can, are nonetheless
endemic to Mexico. Here
again, the views of
those we spoke with
accord well with
Mexico's epidemiological
realities.
The
single most striking
result of the survey was
the dismal showing of
Reproductive Health.
This category of health
care, defined as the
limitation of
childbearing by means of
contraception and
sterilization, came in
dead last. The Mexican
women we surveyed would
prefer almost any kind
of health care to the
kind of "either-IUD-or-Ligation"
programs that they have
been force-fed the past
few decades.
Many proponents of
family planning will
view these results as
contradictory. They
will ask how the
Mexicans can praise
Natural Family Planning
on the one hand, while
condemning reproductive
health care on the
other. They will
maintain that the two
family planning methods
are merely different
means to the same (i.e.,
anti-natal) end? They
will be wrong.
As
it turns out, the people
of Mexico have a far
better understanding of
the differences between
Natural Family Planning
and reproductive health
care than the
controllers. And they
vastly prefer a method
over which they have
intimate control-NFP--
to the permanent, or
semi-permanent methods
imposed by the National
Population Council and
the U.N. Population
Fund.
Those we talked to were
not using NFP as
shorthand for "family
planning."
And
those who expressed, in
the "comments" section,
a desire for more
education in NFP were
not thereby expressing a
preference for fewer
children. Indeed, in
the Mexican context it
is just as likely that
they would use this
additional education in
NFP to conceive a child
as it is that they would
use it to delay
conception. Their
interest in NFP centered
on the fact that they
themselves, and not some
distant, even foreign,
government agency, would
determine the number and
spacing of their
children.
Bear in mind that those
with whom we spoke were
not backward, tribal
people, but highly
Westernized and educated
residents of one of
Mexico's most modernized
cities. Note also that
their prioritization of
their health care needs
was highly rational,
that is to say, that it
accords well with the
real diseases and health
problems that they and
their families must
contend with on a daily
basis. Why should their
views on their own
health care needs,
including their
rejection of so-called
reproductive health
care, not be taken
seriously in planning
health care programs?
[4]
Meeting the real health
needs of women in the
developing world, as
they themselves define
those needs, would mean
funding primary health
care.
Instead the controllers
ignore the views of
women, view their
fertility as a threat,
and act to neutralize
that perceived threat by
disabling their
reproductive systems.
To paraphrase pro-life
feminist Angela Franks,
if women's fertility is
causing social,
economic, environmental,
or health problems, as
the controllers believe,
and if women refuse to
acknowledge this
reality, it is for the
greater good that they
be persuaded, or
compelled, or forced to
stop having children.
Kingsley Davis and other
population alarmists
have long said that it
is necessary, in the
interest of reducing
population growth, to
make it less pleasant
for women to do what so
many of them enjoy
doing, namely, raising
children. [5]
Still, population
control organizations
find it highly
inconvenient that their
programs are not greeted
with joy by their
"targets," and they go
to great lengths to
disguise or explain away
this fact. Overseas,
they work overtime to
create the impression of
robust popular and
government support for
their anti-natal
programs, recruiting
local surrogates,
suborning government
ministries of health and
education, launching
media blitzes, and
sponsoring contraceptive
giveaways. This façade
falls away in
discussions with donors,
in which they arrogantly
suggest that the women's
reluctance to contracept
comes about because they
either don't know their
own minds, or because
they simply don't know
what's good for them (or
their country, or the
environment, etc.).
The
Mexican women we spoke
with knew their own
minds, and their views
should be respected,
both by their government
and by the U.N.
Population Fund.
ENDNOTES:
[1]
UNFPA will continue to
fund this program with
$12 million through
2006. See (http://www.unfpa.org/regions/lac/countries/mexico/4mex0206.pdf).
[2]
Randomness was
approximated by four
factors: 1. the
interviewees were sought
out at random in their
homes. No attempt was
made to seek out
interviewees on the
basis of ethnic group,
religious affiliation,
or other
characteristics. 2.
The interviews were
conducted at the rate of
20 or 30 per week over a
six-month period. 3.
The only age restriction
imposed on the
respondents was that
they must be over 18.
4. The influence of
language factors on the
selection of respondents
was minimized by the
fact that each
interviewer was fluent
and literate in Spanish.
[3]
"Reproductive health,"
was explained to
respondents as the
provision of
contraceptives or
sterilization, while
"Natural Family
Planning," or NFP, was
described as a natural,
i.e., non-surgical and
non-chemical, means of
conceiving or delaying
children.
[4]
Similar results were
obtained from a survey
of Ghanaian women. See
"What Do African Women
Want," PRI Review
(July-August 2001) 11
(3):1-5.
[5]
Kingsley Davis,
"Population Policy and
the Theory of
Reproductive
Motivation," Economic
Development and Cultural
Change, Vol. 25,
Supplement, 1977,
174-78.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Steven W. Mosher is the
president of Population
Research Institute. He
is one of the world's
leading scholars on the
overpopulation myth, and
he has done extensive
field work and study in
China, especially on the
impact of the one-child
forced abortion policy.
This article was
reprinted from the PRI
Weekly Briefing from
www.pop.org; it
originally appeared on
January 5, 2006.
|