Invitation til event om teknologi, videnskab og innovation til fremme af kvinders sundhed den 12. oktober 2021

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    HealthTech for SRHR event Invitation (1)

    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20211/almdel/srsr/bilag/1/2458360.pdf

    HEALTH
    TECH &
    INNOVATION
    T H E F U T U R E O F E Q U A L A N D
    E Q U I T A B L E S E X U A L A N D
    R E P R O D U C T I V E H E A L T H A N D
    R I G H T S F O R Y O U N G G I R L S A N D
    W O M E N ?
    PlanBørnefonden, Maternity Foundation and AIDS-Fondet invite you to join a
    cross-sectoral discussion on opportunities, pitfalls, and potential partnerships
    for advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights for women and girls in
    the global South through science, technology, and innovation.
    Speakers and panelists include the Minister of Development Cooperation,
    Flemming Møller Mortensen, impact startups, funders, academia, and NGOs.
    Political commentator and journalist Søs Marie Serup will moderate the event,
    which will be held in English.
    12 OCTOBER 2021
    08:30 - 13:00
    Maternity Foundation's office
    Forbindelsesvej 3, 2nd Floor
    RSVP to johanne@maternity.dk
    Folketingets Tværpolitiske netværk for seksuel og reproduktiv sundhed og rettigheder 2021-22
    SRSR Alm.del - Bilag 1
    Offentligt
    PROGRAMME
    Arrival, coffee & croissants
    Welcome
    Anna Frellsen, Maternity Foundation
    Intro & Agenda
    Søs Marie Serup, journalist and political commentator
    PART 1: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON HEALTHTECH FOR SRHR IN DANISH
    DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION
    Advancing SRHR Through HealthTech in Danish Development Cooperation
    Flemming Møller Mortensen, Minister for Development Cooperation
    Three to Tango: The Nexus between HealthTech, SRHR and Development?
    Sarah Seddig, Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS)
    Political Commitment in Practice: Barriers to Break in Leaving No One Behind
    Lars Christian Østergreen, AIDS-Fondet
    Panel Debate: Future Pathways to HealthTech for SRHR
    Danish Member of Parliament, The Global Fund, International AIDS Vaccine Initiative
    (IAVI), and Techvelopment Denmark
    Sum Up & Reflections
    COFFEE/TEA
    PART 2: PERSPECTIVES FROM DEVELOPERS AND USERS
    From Development to Rollout: The Dapivirine Vaginal Ring
    Leonard Solai, International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM)
    Lightening Round: Hacking Health without Harm
    Lulu Lab, Real Relief, Africa Design School
    COFFEE/TEA
    PART 3: MYTH OR MISSION? SUSTAINABLE HEALTHTECH FOR SRHR
    Scaling HealthTech Sustainably
    Anna Frellsen, Maternity Foundation
    Partnerships for HealthTech
    Anne Smith Petersen, PlanBørnefonden
    Goodbye & sandwiches
    08:30 - 09:00
    09:00 - 09:05
    09:05 - 09:15
    09:15 - 09:25
    09:25 - 09:40
    09:40-09:55
    09:55-10:30
    10:30-10:45
    10:45-11:00
    11:00-11:15
    11:15-11:50
    11:50-12:00
    12:00-12:15
    12:15-12:30
    12:30-13:00
    Each day, 800 women and girls die from complications in pregnancy, and nearly
    232 million women and girls currently lack access to modern contraceptives.
    Each week, approximately 6,000 young women aged 15–24 years become infected
    with HIV, and AIDS continues to be the leading cause of death for women aged 15-
    49 years globally. The COVID-19 pandemic has only exacerbated existing SRHR
    inequalities and inequities as evident from the significant increase in unwanted
    pregnancies, gender-based violence, and maternal and newborns deaths alongside
    the disruption of life-saving HIV services. This presents a health crisis, a rights
    crisis and for Denmark, a political challenge and opportunity.
    Gender equality and SRHR have constituted a core priority in Danish development
    cooperation since the mid-1980s. This longstanding commitment continues in
    Denmark’s new strategy for development cooperation, Fælles om Verden (The
    World We Share), launched in June 2021, in which gender equality and the rights of
    women and girls cut across the three strategic areas of migration, (human) rights,
    and climate. The strategy posits that Denmark will continue to lead the way in the
    global fight for gender equality and protection of girls' and women’s rights with a
    particular focus on SRHR and will support gender equality and SRHR initiatives
    locally and during humanitarian crises. While the positioning of gender equality and
    SRHR as crosscutting priorities in Danish development cooperation is highly
    welcomed and needed, the commitment is hardly reflected in the government’s
    Finance Act proposal for 2022, in which the financial support for gender equality
    and SRHR remains the same as before.
    Science, technology, and innovation present a new frontier in SRHR initiatives
    locally and during humanitarian crises through mobile phone messaging, social
    media, apps, voice, and video messaging, as well as telemedicine. The science,
    technology and innovation underpinning these initiatives fall under the umbrella
    term, ‘HealthTech.’ HealthTech offers wide coverage and reach in the delivery of
    SRHR information and support, alongside hands-on insights into communities and
    healthcare systems on the ground. This increases the accessibility and agility of
    SRHR services during a crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic. However, even
    within HealthTech, girls and women risk being left behind. In Africa specifically,
    women are 50 percent less likely than men to use and have access to the Internet.
    According to the Danish TechVelopment strategy, bridging the digital gender divide
    – meaning the gap between men's and women’s access to and benefit from
    technologies – requires the empowerment of women and girls to enable them to
    partake in the development of new technologies.
    HealthTech provides a promising opportunity for Denmark to follow through on its
    promise to lead the way in the global fight for gender equality and protecting the
    rights of girls and women. However, without political will, adequate and consistent
    resourcing, and localization of rollout and uptake, it will become a lost opportunity.
    This event brings together representatives from the government, profit and non-
    nonprofit tech and innovation organisations, academia, as well as civil society to
    discuss concrete ways to ensure equal and equitable SRHR for girls and women.
    CONTEXT