Fortney wrote a research article in 1987 and identified that if homes decide not to have five or more children, the number of mothers dying from having children will reduce by a little more than half (58%).

In 2012, Ahmed and colleagues studied what the impact of the use of contraception was on maternal mortality death. Their findings were very revealing. They showed that with the use of contraception, 272,040 deaths that should have occurred in 2008 was prevented. in effect, if contraception were not used, the number of deaths of women due to maternal causes would have been 614,243 rather than the 342,203 reported

Sadly in Nigeria, we had 50,528 mothers who died from maternal related issues in 2008. In the same year, the number of death that averted by the use of contraception definitely outweigh all the risk we do know. The lives of women saved are enormous with significant implications for improving the lives, welfare and wellbeing of children.

The types of contraception used in Nigeria is mainly two types – condoms and injectables

In the very recent past, there have been lots of debates and discussions about the possibility of the injectables that contain progestogen-only -particular;y depo-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) – cause an increased risk of HIV infection. To answer this question, a study was put together to try and determine if the use of DMPA (popularly called Depo), Jadelle implant and or copper IUD (intrauterine device) increases the risk of contracting HIV infection when compared to the risk of the general population contracting HIV infection. The study is known as the ECHO Study.

The ECHO study results will be announced in July 2019. With the results, we definitely will know if depo increases the risk of HIV infection or not

We need to do more to prevent pregnancies from being too early, too late, too many and too frequent. We definitely need to hold our government accountable to increased investments to make all the contraceptive options – condoms, pills, injectables, implants, IUD – accessible for women so women can make the choices that best suit their needs

For one of those rare moments, we see that the efforts of the Nigerian government to promote family sizes not larger than four children per woman, is one that has significant health benefits for women.