Go Back Go Back
Go Back Go Back
Go Back Go Back
Go Back Go Back

Explainer: What is UNFPA and why does it matter?

Explainer: What is UNFPA and why does it matter?

News

Explainer: What is UNFPA and why does it matter?

calendar_today 27 January 2025

Inside a doctor's exam room, a pregnant young woman in white jeans and a light linen blouse lies on a bed with her face turned away from the camera. Her shirt is lifted to expose her stomach covered in gel. Beside her, a female health worker sits in a chair holding an ultrasound scanner to the pregnant woman's stomach and pointing upward at a monitor showing the ultrasound image.
UNFPA works to guarantee that all people, especially women and younger generations, are able to access high-quality sexual and reproductive health services, including voluntary family planning and maternal healthcare. © UNFPA Kazakhstan/Nikolay Sudakov

UNITED NATIONS, New York – Choosing whether, when and with whom to have a baby. Giving birth safely. Living free of sexual and gender-based violence. These are rights now enshrined in international law, yet they are out of reach for far too many people. This is why UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, operates in more than 150 countries, working with governments, experts, organizations and communities to secure the health and rights of women and girls everywhere.

What is UNFPA’s goal?

UNFPA’s mission is to deliver a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person's potential is fulfilled. To this end, we aim to make sexual and reproductive rights a reality for everyone. This means guaranteeing that all people, especially women and younger generations, are able to access high-quality sexual and reproductive health services, including voluntary family planning, so that they can make informed choices about their lives and futures.

Why is there a United Nations agency dedicated to reproductive health and rights? Because not only are these immensely important on a private and individual level, but the consequences extend to entire societies, economies, and humanity.

How do reproductive rights affect you? 

Violations of reproductive rights – from sexual and gender-based violence, child marriage and female genital mutilation, to denial of information about and access to contraception – prevent women and young people from reaching their full potential. Girls who become pregnant while still children themselves typically drop out of school. Women who cannot space their pregnancies are vulnerable to complications, disability and even death. The toll of these individual tragedies is, in fact, global.

Portrait of a young family. Father is standing in the centre facing the camera, wearing a white tshirt, and holding a baby up in the air with both hands, smiling lovingly at the child. The baby is in a white and blue striped romper and is smiling. On their right, the mother looks happily up to the child, smiling widely. She has light brown hair pulled into a loose ponytail and is wearing a black sleeveless shirt.
UNFPA works toward three critical goals: Ending preventable maternal deaths, ending unmet need for family planning, and ending gender-based violence and harmful practices. © UNFPA Georgia/Dina Oganova

The economic fallout is profound, too: A woman who dies in childbirth because she didn’t have quality maternal care will not be joining the workforce. She won’t pay taxes, invest in a business or raise the next generation of children. Both the economy and the community in which she would have lived will be poorer for it.  

Every investment in sexual and reproductive healthcare, and ending gender-based violence, is therefore also an investment in more inclusive, robust and resilient economies. With global cooperation and humanitarian funding under attack, and climate-driven crises taking an incalculable toll, denying women and girls the right and access to life-saving care is reckless on a human, economic and societal level.

What does UNFPA do?

Despite decades of advances, we still live in a world where every two minutes a woman or girl dies because of preventable causes related to pregnancy or childbirth. At least one in three women experiences physical or sexual violence at some point in her life because of her gender.

UNFPA works toward three critical goals: Ending preventable maternal deaths, ending unmet need for family planning, and ending gender-based violence and harmful practices.

In advancing this first goal, UNFPA is a global leader in developing and raising standards for maternal healthcare and midwifery training. In particular, UNFPA champions midwifery as a low-cost, highly effective means of quickly reaching women and saving lives in even the most difficult terrain. If fully invested and scaled up, midwifery care could avert two-thirds of maternal and neonatal deaths.

Inside a hospital room, a female healthcare worker dressed in a blue medical uniform stands over the hospital crib of a newborn baby. She is swaddling the baby in a light blue patterned cloth. To their right, half out of frame, another woman in blue medical uniform stands with her back to the camera.
UNFPA is a global leader in developing and raising standards for maternal healthcare and midwifery training, which help to dramatically reduce the rate of maternal and neonatal deaths. © UNFPA Tajikistan/Farhodjon Nabiyulloev

In the knowledge that nearly half of all pregnancies worldwide are unintended, UNFPA is a critical global source for family planning. This helps girls and young people avoid unintended pregnancies and prevents abortions from taking place, and saves lives: Globally, complications in pregnancy and childbirth are one of the leading causes of death among adolescent girls, and unsafe abortion is one of the leading causes of maternal death overall.

In 2023 alone, UNFPA’s programmes helped to reach 27 million women and young people with sexual and reproductive health services. UNFPA-supported contraceptive programmes helped prevent nearly 18 million unintended pregnancies, nearly 6 million unsafe abortions and around 34,000 maternal deaths.

UNFPA is also a leader in preventing, addressing and ending gender-based violence – the most widespread human rights violation in the world. In addition to supporting protection measures, safe spaces and clinical management of rape, UNFPA also works to tackle the damaging beliefs that underpin acts such as gender-based violencegender-biased sex selection and child marriage.

How does UNFPA reach the most vulnerable?

UNFPA’s work is especially critical in humanitarian settings, where women do not stop getting pregnant or giving birth.

In over 59 crisis-hit countries, UNFPA is on the ground, providing antenatal care, maternal health services, and protection from – and treatment for – sexual violence. “The residents say to us, ‘We just had a shelling this morning. How did you come here, how are you not afraid?’ All I can say is I just love my job, I love people. I am happy to help them as much as I can," said Tatiana Putria, a nurse in Ukraine who reaches women and girls in need through a UNFPA-supported ambulance.  

Ambulance with UNFPA and AECID logos on its side is parked outside a salmon-coloured building. A woman in standing beside the ambulance looking directly at the camera with a neutral expression.  She has shoulder-length white hair, and is wearing medical scrubs and a white puffy winter coat, her hands tucked in the coat pockets
UNFPA's humanitarian response to the war in Ukraine has included providing medical equipment, ambulances and mobile teams on the ground as well as support services for refugee women and girls who fled to neighbouring countries. © UNFPA Ukraine/Alina Stara

Sexual and reproductive health should not be a luxury, available to only those living in peace, safety and financial security. All women, everywhere, deserve bodily autonomy, empowerment and healthcare – that is why UNFPA’s work matters. 

Hanna Lukianchenko, who fled to neighbouring Romania when bombs began falling on her home in Odesa, said she found a new sense of community and support at the women and girls safe spaces created as part of UNFPA's humanitarian response. "It was like being thrown a lifesaver," she said.