Maanasa Chitti
Maanasa Chitti is a former intern at the Maternal Health Initiative and a current second-year Master's student at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. While volunteering with an NGO and working with individuals from under-resourced communities, she became interested in health disparities.
Currently, she is interested in researching how health disparities and social factors influence pregnancy and other reproductive health outcomes. Her work also focuses on Intimate Partner Violence in lower- and middle-income countries.
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Delivering Dignity: The Importance of Respectful Maternity Care
›Women who are treated with respect and dignity during childbirth are more likely to have positive birth experiences, feel empowered to make informed decisions about their care, and have better health outcomes for themselves and their newborns.
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8 Billion and Counting: Rethinking Rhetoric on Population and Choice
›The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) 2023 State of the World Population (SWOP) Report offers a chance to reflect on what’s at stake in debates over global population. “The question is not whether the human population is too large or too small. The question is whether everyone can exercise their fundamental human right to choose the number and spacing of their children,” said Sarah Craven, Chief of the Washington Office of UNFPA at the virtual D.C. launch of the report at the Wilson Center on April 26, 2023.
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Pushing Back the Pushback: Addressing the Complexities of Gender and Migration
›“We must unite our efforts to push back the pushback,” said Katrín Jakobsdóttir, Prime Minister of Iceland, at a recent side event during the 67th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW67). Humanitarian crises and forced displacement increase pushback against women’s and girl’s human rights and safety. Jakobsdóttir called for global efforts to recognize this inequity and to fight for gender equality in humanitarian responses.
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Sexual and Reproductive Justice: A Vehicle in Progress
›The pace of change towards advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights is piecemeal and far too slow, said Dr. Natalia Kanem, Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), at a recent panel hosted by The Columbia University Global Health Justice & Governance Program (GHJG), in partnership with UNFPA, Columbia World Projects, and the Ford Foundation. The event launched the November 2022 report, Sexual and reproductive justice as the vehicle to deliver the Nairobi Summit commitments, published by the High-Level Commission on the Nairobi Summit on ICPD25 Follow-up.