Harnessing the Power of Teenage Girls
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
LAGOS
– When you think of teenage girls, you might imagine common
stereotypes, from the “mean girl” to the sullen high school student
locked in her bedroom. The reality is that teenage girls are not only
some of the world’s most marginalized people; they also have virtually
unmatched potential to help build a better future for all.
As
it stands, adolescent girls are routinely denied control over their
destinies. More than 32 million of the poorest are currently out of
school. Every day, 39,000 girls under the age of 18 become someone’s
wife. For huge numbers of girls worldwide, reproductive rights seem like
an impossible dream.
This
situation is morally reprehensible, socially self-defeating, and
economically foolish. By addressing it, we could not only protect
millions of children; we could also tackle some of the greatest
challenges facing the world today.
Consider
the challenge posed by rapid population growth. Though population size
seems to be leveling off in most parts of the world, it continues to
rise fast in some regions, particularly those where girls face the
highest barriers to success. In Africa, the population is expected to
double by 2050 and quadruple by 2100.
If
teenage girls were given the knowledge, skills, and tools to avoid
unwanted pregnancy and take control of their own futures, fertility
rates would drop substantially. These newly empowered and educated girls
could then become agents for broader positive change within their
communities.
Protecting
the world’s young girls is a tall order. But countries worldwide have
pledged, through the ambitious Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), to
fulfill it by 2030, including by ending child marriage and ensuring that
all girls are in school. But if countries are to succeed in protecting
and empowering girls, they must also embrace the promise of a key
initiative: to expand access to the vaccine for human papillomavirus,
which causes the vast majority of cervical cancer cases.
A
relatively new development, the HPV vaccine is most effective on nine-
to 13-year-old girls who have not yet been exposed to the virus, meaning
that they have never been sexually active. This age requirement
differentiates the HPV vaccine from most other childhood vaccines, which
are mainly administered to infants.
At
first glance, this might seem like a serious disadvantage, because the
HPV vaccine cannot simply be incorporated into other vaccine
initiatives. In fact, the age requirement provides an important
opportunity to reach adolescent girls with other vital health services,
such as reproductive education, menstrual hygiene, deworming, nutrition
checks, vitamin shots, and general check-ups.
Encouragingly,
developing-country governments have increasingly been demanding the HPV
vaccine. This makes sense: of the 266,000 women who die from cervical
cancer every year – an average of one every two minutes – 85% are in
developing countries. If left unchecked, that figure is expected to rise
to 416,000 by 2035, overtaking maternal deaths. For many of these
countries, the HPV vaccine is not just an effective solution, one that
prevents 1,500 deaths per 100,000 vaccinated; it is often the only
solution, because the poorest countries lack the capacity to offer
screening or treatment for cervical cancer. This is one reason why
cancer experts, government officials, private-sector leaders, and civil
society representatives met a few weeks ago in Addis Ababa for the tenth
Stop Cervical, Breast and Prostate Cancer in Africa conference.
There
is more good news: the foundations of an HPV-vaccine initiative have
already been laid. In 2013, well before the SDGs were agreed, Gavi, the
Vaccine Alliance, for which I serve as Board Chair, took steps to make
the HPV vaccine available and affordable in poor countries. Since then,
we have seen 23 countries introduce the vaccine through demonstration
pilot projects, with five more set to follow.
But
there are significant challenges ahead. While the focus on holding
vaccination sessions in schools has proved successful, it is inadequate
for reaching girls in countries with low school-attendance rates,
especially in urban areas. Unless we find a way to reach the most
vulnerable groups, no amount of political will or financing will be
enough to achieve the SDGs to protect women and girls.
Given
that only two Gavi-supported countries, both of which have relatively
high enrollment rates, have so far introduced the vaccine nationally, it
is not entirely clear how difficult it will be to overcome this
challenge. As we move away from demonstration projects toward a more
efficient and cost-effective system of phased national scale-ups, we
should gain a better sense of what to expect.
We
do have some ideas for reaching girls who are not in school – beginning
with community health centers. As it stands, women are most likely to
go to a community health center when they are pregnant, or to have their
infants vaccinated. But by engaging with community leaders and parents
to raise awareness of cervical-cancer prevention and address other local
health concerns, we are finding that it is possible to generate demand
and achieve good turnout at these centers.
Ensuring
that all girls have access to the HPV vaccine would improve countless
lives, not only by reducing rates of cervical cancer, but also by
enabling the provision of numerous other critical services. It is an
opportunity that should be on the minds of cancer experts, government
officials, and representatives from the private sector and civil
society. And it is an imperative for all of the 193 governments that
have signed up to the SDGs. We must not let our girls down.
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