What's
the Situation ?
In the turbulent years
which followed Armenia's
independence in 1991, there were few resources to address the specific issues
and risks facing the country's young people.
In the
early 90s, Armenia plunged
into a period of deep economic depression, exacerbated by an energy crisis,
armed conflict, and the continuing financial and social cost of a devastating
earthquake in 1988. The crisis, combined with new freedom to travel, led to
a huge wave of migration from Armenia,
with one million people leaving the country since 1990.
Of the current population of Armenia, young people aged 15-24
years old make up just over 19 per cent.
A lack of people or places
to which to turn for information
In the years which followed Independence
as throughout the Soviet period education for young
people in sexual and reproductive health was largely ignored in Armenia. It is
not yet incorporated into the school curriculum, though a few schools in the country have been involved in
pilot projects.
In Armenia's
rapidly-changing social and economic environment, traditional sources of
support such as parents, other family members or other adults in the
community don't seem able to
help young people with the kind of information they need. According to a 2002
Knowledge, Attitudes and Practice survey, only 18% of young respondents said that they had received
sexual and/or reproductive health advice or information from their parents.
Armenia's health professionals,
teachers and social welfare workers are rarely trained in matters of sexuality,
sexual and reproductive health or in counseling young people. So for Armenia's youth
and adolescents, the main sources of information about sexuality and sexual
health matters are peers and magazines.
This lack of
knowledge about sexual and reproductive health is even more risky for
street children, or young people in institutions who lack family protection
against exploitation.
Within the existing public health system,
there are few youth-friendly services in Armenia. Young people have limited
access to other sexual and reproductive health services, mainly due to the
cultural stigma associated with sexuality of adolescents and financial
constrains.
Although contraceptives , including condoms, are
for sale in pharmacies, they are simply too expensive for many adolescents.
According to the 2002 Knowledge, Attitudes and Practice survey, about 20% of
sexually active young males and 56% of sexually active young females have never
used contraceptive methods.
Risk of Sexually Transmitted Infections
or HIV/AIDS
In this current situation, sexually
active young people in Armenia
are at a greater risk of unwanted
pregnancy, induced abortion, infections or
HIV/AIDS
and the associated social and health consequences of these risks. According to
the Ministry of Health, the number of pregnancies and sexually transmitted
infections among adolescents has significantly increased over recent years.
Armenia also belongs to a region within which
HIV/AIDS is spreading fast. Armenia
is endangered by the fact that it has close migration ties with countries with
dangerously high growth rates in sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS
i.e. Russia and Ukraine.
Gender-based violence, including the trafficking of young
women , is also of great concern.
Classroom education positive first steps
In principle, introducing education on sexual
and reproductive health should not be a problem. According the KAP (2002)
survey the majority of adults (88%) and young respondents (88%) were in favor
of sexual education being introduced in to the general school curricula. Most
of them said they were sure that this would not have a negative influence on
the sexual behavior of adolescents.
Despite this,
progress in Armenia's state
run education system has been very slow. The Ministry of Education and Science
working together with local NGOs, UNFPA and UNICEF, have run a number of
pilot schemes in selected schools. There are plans to introduce expand the
“healthy lifestyle” including sexual and reproductive health, into
all schools in 2006.
Models already
in use overseas are also being considered. With support from UNFPA, specialists
from the Ministry of Education have visited Romania
to study the Romanian experience and consider bringing this to Armenia and
adapting it to the country's specific needs.
Laws in place: more implementation needed
A law on Reproductive Health, adopted by
the Armenian Parliament in 2002, states that adolescents have rights both to
sex education and to sexual and reproductive health protection through access
to quality, youth-friendly SRH institutions and healthcare services.
Armenia's NGO community and many
of its young people have
been actively involved in development of this law and the process was strongly
supported by UNFPA Armenia office. However, the mechanisms and tools for it
to be applied locally, regionally and nationally still need to be developed.
The Government
of Armenia has identified three important challenges that need to be addressed
in order to meet sexual and reproductive needs of young people:
-
A more positive attitude and support of the civil society, local
authorities and mass media towards sexual and reproductive health
education and youth-friendly approaches.
- An improvement in the
knowledge, and communication and counseling skills of teachers,
educators, and health providers on issues of sexual and
reproductive health.
- Increased access of young people, including those
in need of special protection, to:
Information
about sexual and reproductive health
Information
about gender
Youth-friendly counseling
and care
Affordable
contraception
What is UNFPA doing ?
UNFPA
began its support to population programmes in Armenia
in 1995. Since then it has assisted a wide range of activities to improve the
awareness and skills of young people in sexual and reproductive health and
to improve the help improve the quality and accessibility of reproductive health
information and services across the country.
In its current
programme for Armenia, UNFPA
is seeking to
- Improve
the awareness and skills of young people in reproductive health
- Develop
a comprehensive information, education and communication strategy to increase
the use of integrated reproductive health services
- Provide
technical assistance to the Ministry of Education and Science and to the
Ministry of Health to develop a health education and family life curriculum
for secondary and tertiary educational institutions
- Support
out-of-school activities to encourage healthy lifestyles
- Introduce
guidelines on what youth-friendly service services need to be provided
and how that can be achieved
- Establish on a pilot basis youth-friendly
centers operated by the Ministry of Health, NGOs, universities
and the army.
For more details
of UNFPA's individual projects in Armenia.
UNFPA has also pioneered the use of Peer Education in Armenia. Peer education involves well-trained and motivated young people
who actively attempt to reach and help young people of the same age and
background as themselves in order to pass on the knowledge and skills they
will need for their health and well-being. Peer education is relaxed
and can take place in formal or informal settings. This
has become a popular way of addressing issues of sexual and reproductive
health including sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS. For more about Youth Peer activities
in Armenia, click here
Together
with an NGO, the Association For Family and Health of Armenia
(AFHA) , UNFPA has started a
peer education programme for high school and university students and also
those who are no longer at school on sexuality and reproductive health issues,
including HIV/AIDS.
UNFPA also runs
workshops and seminars especially designed for sexually active young people
to inform and educate them on sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS.
Peer educators have been trained to work in local schools and other institutions.
Current UNFPA projects in Armenia:
Helping
Young People get Access to Quality Information and Services on Reproductive
Health
Improving
the Use of High Quality Reproductive Health Services in Armenia
Capacity building in HIV/AIDS prevention
Population and development strategies