Hyderabad: There is still a great lack of necessary awareness about sexual health among men and women in our country. The result of this is usually seen in the form of sexual and reproductive health problems. Women in particular, due to lack of awareness or due to social taboos and many other reasons, are neither able to talk much about their problems nor get them treated on time. This affects not only their physical health but also their mental and emotional health and social life.
Sexual and Reproductive Health Awareness Day is observed every year on February 12th to raise awareness among the general public about issues related to sexual and reproductive health. The purpose of this is not just to spread awareness about sexual or reproductive diseases, but also to discuss the issues related to the law, misconceptions, social perceptions and thinking of people related to them.
There is still a great lack of awareness about sexual and reproductive health among men and women in India, but it is not that the entire population in the world is self-aware. Every year, millions of people around the world become victims of many serious diseases and infections due to a lack of information related to sex and contraception, or not following them. At the same time, there is a continuous increase in the cases of infertility all over the world.
According to the data available on various websites, unsafe abortion or termination of pregnancy is the third biggest cause of maternal death in India. About 15.6 million abortions happen in India every year. On the other hand, about six per cent of India's adult population gets treated for Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) and Reproductive Tract Infections (RTIs) every year. According to statistics, about thirty million people in India are suffering from sexually transmitted infections.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), around 186 million people are victims of infertility globally and this number is expected to increase in the coming years. In the year 2019, a report released by the World Health Organization stated that every day one million people worldwide are falling prey to sexually transmitted diseases, while every year crores of people are infected with sexually transmitted diseases like gonorrhoea, chlamydia, syphilis and trichomoniasis.
Sexual health or reproductive health is not just limited to infections or infertility. Infections and diseases like HIV/AIDS, Reproductive Cancer, STD, RTI, Gonorrhea, Chlamydia, Syphilis and Trichomoniasis, Menstrual problems in women, loss of sensation in sexual intercourse, premature ejaculation, inability to get sexual satisfaction or sexual dysfunction, sexual disorder, sexual violence, female genital mutilation, inability or problem to conceive in both women and men, sperm related problems in men and issues related to reproductive in women fall under this category.
Sexual and reproductive rights are fundamental human rights. Under these, every woman or man has the right to take decisions about their own body. But this is rarely possible due to repressed social traditions and norms. In India, even today, people barely talk about sexual and reproductive health. Especially adolescent girls and women still do not know much about sexual and reproductive health and the precautions related to them.