Resources for media
Everything you need to cover the International Day of Action for Women’s Health — key facts, context, expert contacts, and campaign information.
This Call to Action was prepared in light of May 28, the International Day of Action for Women’s Health. It is rooted in the theme: Essential, Not Optional: Strengthening Health Systems to Uphold Health Rights and SRHRJ in Times of Polycrisis.
It underscores that even in the midst of multiple overlapping crises, sexual and reproductive health, rights and justice (SRHRJ) is not optional. It must be prioritized as fundamental to our right to health and to building equitable, people-centered health systems accessible to all.
We stand in collective resistance against far-right coalitions, authoritarian governance, budget cuts, restrictive regulations, and anti-rights movements that continue to undermine bodily autonomy, restrict access to essential health services — including contraception, abortion, and maternal care — and dismantle decades of hard-won rights.
The Call to Action was developed through a multi-stage process including pre-consultations, learning sessions, and global consultations. It brought together over 100 organizations and rights advocates from Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Eurasia, and Latin America and the Caribbean.
These diverse voices, perspectives, and contexts were brought together to co-create this document and shape the theme for this year’s May 28 International Day of Action for Women’s Health. It reflects our shared priorities and collective vision, and is intended to guide actions worldwide in advancing SRHRJ as part of our fundamental right to health.
With just four years remaining until 2030, the world is already far off track from achieving the Sustainable Development Goals — particularly SDG 3 (Good Health), SDG 5 (Gender Equality), and SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities). Every day, more than 700 women die from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth.
An estimated 3.6 billion people already live in areas highly vulnerable to climate change. Between 2030 and 2050, climate change is expected to cause approximately 250,000 additional deaths per year from undernutrition, malaria, diarrhoea, and heat stress alone. Direct costs to health are projected to reach US$2–4 billion annually by 2030.
Countries are falling behind on Universal Health Coverage. Progress on preventable maternal mortality, universal access to SRHR, gender equality, and health-related inequalities is being reversed. Across contexts, governments are failing to meet their human rights obligations while global systems continue to prioritize militarization, austerity, and profit over people’s health and wellbeing.
This regression signals a broader failure by governments to uphold longstanding commitments under international human rights frameworks, including the SDGs, the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, the ICPD Programme of Action, and the 2023 UN High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage.
In 2026, overlapping crises converge and intensify one another — reshaping health systems and systematically undermining the realization of human rights, including the right to health, SRHR, bodily autonomy, and access to life-saving care. These crises also expose and deepen structural inequalities embedded in global systems, including legacies of colonialism and extractive economic models.
In 2026, over 40 countries will hold national elections, affecting more than 1.6 billion people globally — presenting both opportunities for progress and serious risks of rollback on health and SRHR agendas. Anti-rights actors are increasingly coordinated across borders, seeking to capture political and multilateral spaces.
In regions like South Asia, transitions to new governments following youth-led revolutions have signaled democratic energy but also created uncertainty, threatening to push health and SRHR agendas to the sidelines during prolonged policy transitions.
Across settings including Palestine, Sudan, Ukraine, Lebanon, Iran, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, international humanitarian and human rights law obligations are being severely undermined. Civilians — especially women, girls, and gender-diverse people — face grave violations of their rights to health, safety, dignity, and survival.
Health infrastructure, including hospitals and clinics, is being attacked, damaged, or destroyed. Health workers are displaced, detained, or killed. Access to essential services — including contraception, maternal health care, support for survivors of sexual violence, and safe abortion — is severely restricted, with direct consequences for preventable morbidity and mortality.
Global military expenditure now reaches approximately USD 2.4 to 2.8 trillion annually, significantly exceeding investment in primary health care and gender equality.
The persistent underfunding of SRHR represents a failure to fulfill governments’ right-to-health obligations. Debt burdens, shrinking fiscal space, and market-driven health reforms weaken public health systems and accelerate the shift toward privatized, fragmented care — undermining availability, accessibility, acceptability, and quality.
Rising out-of-pocket costs and increased taxation to meet debt obligations further entrench inequality, disproportionately affecting women in all their diversity, people living in poverty, marginalized communities, informal workers, and others already excluded from equal enjoyment of rights.
Official development assistance (ODA) from DAC members fell to USD 174.3 billion in 2025 — a 23.1% decrease compared to 2024. Public investment in health, including SRHR, remains chronically insufficient, while militarization, debt servicing, and austerity continue to divert resources from economic, social, and cultural rights.
Attacks against gender equality and bodily autonomy are intensifying. Civil society organizations and feminist movements — essential to rights realization through service delivery, accountability, and rights claiming — are increasingly restricted through legal, financial, and administrative measures. Shrinking civic space and rising authoritarian practices undermine the rights to freedom of expression, association, and participation.
The global architecture meant to uphold solidarity and human rights is also weakening. Proposals to merge UNFPA and UN Women risk diluting mandated responsibilities on SRHR and gender equality, weakening institutional capacity to uphold rights in practice.
Climate change is accelerating in both scale and severity — driving increased heat exposure, extreme weather events, air pollution, infectious disease transmission, food insecurity, malnutrition, and mental health impacts. These impacts directly undermine the right to health and disproportionately affect marginalized populations.
Pollution, toxic waste, rapid urbanization, deforestation, and resource extraction are direct threats to SRHR and the right to health. Toxic air and water pollution increase respiratory illness, reproductive health complications, and maternal mortality. As populations concentrate in informal settlements, access to clean water, sanitation, and healthcare becomes precarious, and exposure to communicable diseases, maternal health complications, and gender-based violence increases.
By 2030, climate change is projected to push an additional 132 million people into poverty. In humanitarian and climate-affected settings, SRHR services are often among the first disrupted and the last restored.
Rising food insecurity — driven by conflict, climate shocks, economic instability, and weak governance — is undermining health and SRHR worldwide. Women, girls, and gender-diverse people are often the first to sacrifice meals, deepening gender inequality and exposing them to harmful coping strategies such as early marriage or transactional sex.
In Asia and Africa, prolonged droughts and displacement have left millions food insecure, with pregnant women unable to access adequate nutrition or safe delivery services. In the Pacific Islands, climate-induced disruptions to agriculture and fisheries have reduced food availability, limiting access to SRHR services. Adulteration of food — through contamination, unsafe additives, and poor regulation — is a growing threat, with documented links to malnutrition, reproductive health complications, and chronic illness.
Digital repression, disinformation, and algorithmic censorship are increasingly restricting access to accurate, evidence-based SRHR information. Human rights defenders face surveillance, harassment, and technology-facilitated gender-based violence, undermining the rights to privacy, safety, and freedom of expression.
Under-resourced mental health systems fail to meet rising needs, leaving young people especially vulnerable to anxiety, depression, and stigma. Across countries in Asia and Africa, young women increasingly rely on mobile platforms for SRHR information and mental health support — but in the absence of robust legal frameworks, many face risks of misinformation and cyber-violence that exacerbate health challenges and overall wellbeing.
The lack of robust legal frameworks undermines governments’ obligation to respect, protect, and fulfill the right to health and SRHRJ. Outdated or poorly enforced laws leave communities vulnerable to unsafe practices, discrimination, and denial of services. Weak sexual violence laws, gaps in legislation, and poor implementation of laws meant to end harmful practices perpetuate injustice.
In many contexts, consensual relationships between adolescents are criminalized rather than protected. Laws that fail to address marital rape, permit child marriage, or criminalize same-sex relationships and abortion further erode rights. Without strong legal protections, austerity measures, environmental harms, and social backlash are compounded, reinforcing inequality and eroding public trust.
Despite immense challenges, feminist movements, grassroots groups, youth-led and LGBTQIA+ organizations, and health workers continue to organize, mobilize, defend rights, and sustain access to health and SRHR services — even as civic space shrinks and repression increases.
National-level efforts are shifting narratives and driving policy change. In Latin America, advances in Colombia, Mexico, and Argentina have reshaped global conversations on abortion rights. Across Africa and Asia, legal reforms, policy shifts, and sustained community-led advocacy are expanding access to SRHR services and strengthening efforts to eliminate discriminatory laws.
These efforts remind us that the struggle for SRHR is inseparable from broader struggles for economic justice, climate justice, democratic governance, and human rights. Governments, donors, and multilateral institutions must come together under the banner of health and SRHR for all.
The May 28 Campaign is endorsed by organizations from Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Eurasia, and Latin America and the Caribbean — spanning civil society, feminist movements, youth-led networks, and health advocacy organizations.
Full list available at may28.org/campaign-partners-2026
Any organization working to advance women’s health rights is welcome to launch May 28 activities, in the aim of ensuring women’s health and wellbeing worldwide, particularly in terms of SRHR.
- Polycrisis and SRHRJ global agenda
- Call to Action demands and development
- Civil society mobilization and solidarity
- Campaign materials and actions
- Media inquiries and interview coordination
- Partner and regional coordination