272 040 mothers from 172 countries were saved from dying during childbirth by using contraception in 2008. A study led by a researcher from the Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, USA using mathematical models, was able to show that the number of lives saved could have been higher if more women who needed contraception had access to it. At the time of their study, only 45.5% of women around the world, who should have been using contraception were using it.

Since then the proportion of women who use contraceptives had increased to 63.3% in 2010. Despite this, there is still sufficient concerns expressed by advocates that the number of women who have unmet needs for family planning is still large enough to cause significant numbers of maternal deaths especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Advocates therefore call for their governments who made commitments to the FP2020 goals, to increase the use of contraception.