Home Local Civic Action The Ripple Effects of the U.S. Retreat from International Reproductive Care

The Ripple Effects of the U.S. Retreat from International Reproductive Care

The Ripple Effects of the U.S. Retreat from International Reproductive Care

U.S. cuts to global health funding are putting reproductive rights, healthcare access and human rights at risk worldwide. Human rights experts discuss exactly what’s happening—and what would stop the suffering.

An abortion-rights rally in front of the White House on March 29, 2019, demand the end of the global gag rule. (Astrid Riecken / Getty Images)

The U.S. has long been the largest donor to global health programs, but under the Trump administration, that support is rapidly disappearing. The resulting funding cuts are devastating reproductive health access, disease prevention efforts and human rights around the world.

In this Q&A, global health and human rights experts Jaime M. Gher, Payal Shah and Floriane Borel break down the global ripple effects—and the urgent need for action.


Jaime Gher: To understand the United States’ cuts to foreign aid, we should first take a broad view of the devastating impacts. What healthcare services have been eliminated? How have these interrupted services affected levels of disease and death around the world?

Payal Shah: The Trump administration is claiming that it’s tackling waste, fraud and abuse. But what we are actually seeing around the world is that the impact of these cuts have been incredibly wasteful, fraudulent and abusive. The administration’s actions are allowing children and pregnant women to die of preventable causes, jeopardizing stockpiles of life-saving medical supplies, and reversing decades of global health progress.

Physicians for Human Rights has done studies on the U.S. aid cuts across the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and Tanzania. And what we’re seeing across the board is really devastating stories of preventable health harm. If you’re the parent of a child who has died from malaria, if you’re a pregnant woman who can’t prevent HIV transmission to your child, if you’re a health worker who hasn’t received your salary in months, the early impacts of the Trump aid cuts have already been devastating. 

Yet it’s important to underscore that it’s not too late to try to reverse some of these trends. The infrastructure responsible for decades of progress on global health can still be salvaged. Clinics are still standing, health workers are still trained. And if the funding were restored, we could still make a concrete impact and prevent the kinds of death and suffering that we’ve been seeing.

The administration’s actions are allowing children and pregnant women to die of preventable causes, jeopardizing stockpiles of life-saving medical supplies, and reversing decades of global health progress.

Payal Shah, Physicians for Human Rights

Gher: News recently broke that the Trump administration is trying to destroy a nearly $10 million stockpile of contraceptives. How does this fit within the administration’s broader attack on reproductive healthcare?

Floriane Borel: So these contraceptive products were already bought and paid for by American taxpayers and intended for distribution in low and middle-income countries. But right now they still remain in limbo, in a warehouse in Belgium. These contraceptives alone could have provided pregnancy prevention to nearly 1.6 million women in low and middle-income countries. But this is just one part of the story. 

Our recent research estimates that, over the course of one year without U.S. global family planning funding, 47.6 million women and couples in low and middle-income countries will be denied modern contraceptives. This will result in about 17.1 million unintended pregnancies and 34,000 preventable pregnancy-related deaths worldwide.

This is about more than these specific supplies—it’s an attack on contraception more broadly. The U.S. State Department made that clear when they falsely claimed that the supplies could “potentially be abortifacients,” when what’s being destroyed are contraceptive methods that prevent unwanted pregnancies.

The antiabortion movement has long worked to deliberately and inaccurately conflate contraception and abortion, and seeing this misleading language come from the U.S. State Department is very alarming. It’s a deliberate effort to confuse and stigmatize contraceptive use, and ultimately undermine reproductive autonomy and people’s ability to make decisions about their own bodies.

The antiabortion movement has long worked to deliberately and inaccurately conflate contraception and abortion, and seeing this misleading language come from the U.S. State Department is very alarming.

Floriane Borel, Guttmacher Institute