Diagnosis
US incineration of contraceptives denies 1.4m African women and girls lifesaving care, NGO says

The US decision to incinerate US$9.7m worth of contraceptives is expected to result in 174,000 unintended pregnancies and 56,000 unsafe abortions across five African countries.
The medical supplies, many of which were not due to expire until between 2027 and 2029, would have supported more than 1.4 million women and girls in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia and Mali.
The products had already been manufactured, packaged and prepared for delivery. Around 77 per cent were earmarked for distribution in the five African nations.
The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), a global healthcare provider and advocate for sexual and reproductive rights, offered to take the contraceptives for redistribution at no cost to US taxpayers. The offer was declined.
IPPF said the decision would deny women and girls in the affected countries access to lifesaving care.
Tanzania will be hardest hit, losing more than 1 million injectable doses and 365,100 implants – small devices inserted under the skin that release hormones to prevent pregnancy.
This amounts to 28 per cent of the country’s total annual contraceptive need.
Dr Bakari, project coordinator at Umati, IPPF’s member association in Tanzania, said: “We are facing a major challenge.
“The impact of the USAID funding cuts has already significantly affected the provision of sexual and reproductive health services in Tanzania, leading to a shortage of contraceptive commodities, especially implants.
“This shortage has directly impacted clients’ choices regarding family planning uptake.”
In Mali, women will lose access to 1.2 million oral contraceptive pills and 95,800 implants, nearly one-quarter of the country’s annual requirement.
In Zambia, 48,400 implants and 295,000 injectable doses will no longer be available. In Kenya, 108,000 women will go without contraceptive implants.
Marie Evelyne Petrus-Barry, IPPF’s Africa regional director, called the move “appalling and extremely wasteful”.
She said: “These lifesaving medical supplies were destined to countries where access to reproductive care is already limited, and in some cases, part of a broader humanitarian response, such as in the DRC.
“The choice to incinerate them is unjustifiable.”
In Kenya, the cuts compound an already strained system.
Nelly Munyasia, executive director of the Reproductive Health Network in Kenya, said stocks of long-term contraceptives had already run out, and warned of further consequences.
She said: “There is a 46 per cent funding gap in Kenya’s national family planning programme,.
“These systemic setbacks come at a time when unmet need for contraception remains high. Nearly one in five girls aged 15 to 19 are already pregnant or has given birth.
“Unsafe abortions remain among the five leading causes of maternal deaths in Kenya.”
Munyasia also warned that health workers’ skills are being eroded and said a lack of contraceptive access would increase maternal deaths as more women seek unsafe abortions.
While Kenya’s 2010 constitution allows abortion when a pregnant person’s life or health is at risk, the 1963 penal code still criminalises the procedure.
As a result, healthcare providers often avoid offering abortion care, even in emergencies.
A US state department spokesperson confirmed last month that the decision to destroy the supplies had been authorised.
Reports indicated the products were to be incinerated in France, prompting the French government to say it was “following the situation closely” following objections from rights and family planning groups.
The state department said the contraceptives could not be sold or donated to “eligible buyers” due to US legal restrictions, which prohibit foreign aid to organisations that provide abortion services, counsel on abortion, or advocate for abortion rights overseas.
Diagnosis
WHO launches AI tool for reproductive health information

The World Health Organization (WHO) has launched an AI tool in beta to help policymakers, experts and healthcare professionals access sexual and reproductive health information faster.
Called ChatHRP, the tool was created by WHO’s Human Reproduction Programme and draws only on verified research and guidance collected by HRP and WHO.
It uses natural language processing and retrieval-augmented generation to produce referenced content and cut the time spent searching through documents across different platforms and databases.
WHO said ChatHRP also has multilingual capabilities and low-bandwidth functionality to support use in a wide range of settings.
The beta-testing phase is aimed at a broad professional audience, including policymakers, healthcare workers, researchers and civil society groups.
WHO said the tool can help users quickly access up-to-date evidence, find sources for academic work and verify information on sexual and reproductive health and rights.
Examples of questions it can answer include the latest violence against women data in Oceania for women aged 15 to 49, recommendations on managing diabetes during pregnancy, and whether PrEP and contraception can be used at the same time. PrEP is medicine used to reduce the risk of getting HIV.
WHO added that the system will be updated regularly as new HRP materials are published and includes a feedback loop so users can flag gaps in the information provided.
The launch comes amid wider concern about misinformation in sexual and reproductive health.
A 2025 scoping review found that misinformation in digital spaces is a systemic issue that can undermine human rights, reinforce discriminatory social norms and exclude marginalised voices.
The review also said misinformation can affect health systems by shaping provider knowledge and practice, disrupting service delivery and creating barriers to equitable care.
WHO said ChatHRP is intended to give users streamlined access to reliable information as a counter to “algorithms, opinions, or misinformation”.
Menopause
AI maps how reproductive organs age differently during menopause
Pregnancy
Early miscarriage care could prevent 10,000 pregnancy losses a year, study finds
Entrepreneur1 week agoFuture Fertility raises Series A financing to scale AI tools redefining fertility care worldwide
Entrepreneur4 weeks agoThree sessions that show exactly where women’s health is heading in 2026
News4 weeks agoTwo weeks left to make your mark in women’s cardiovascular health
Fertility2 weeks agoFuture Fertility partners with Japan’s leading IVF provider, Kato Ladies Clinic
Mental health3 weeks agoMore research needed to understand link between brain fog and menopause, expert says
Mental health2 weeks agoLifting weights shows mental health and cognitive benefits in older women, study finds
News3 weeks agoSelf-employment linked to better cardiovascular health outcomes in Hispanic women
Entrepreneur3 weeks agoFlora Fertility closes US$5m seed round
















