Abstract

Prof. Hubbert De Watteville, first Secretary General and founder of the International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians (FIGO), created the International Association for Maternal and Neonatal Health (IAMANEH) in 1977, after realizing that the improvements in maternal and neonatal health observed in developed countries were not benefiting the so-called Third World. The purpose of IAMANEH was to stimulate local associations to take initiatives to improve the health of the women and their children. Lack of attention to women's own health has been characteristic of the emphasis on antenatal care to protect the newborn or family planning to reduce demographic growth, with little attention to the needs of women themselves. The evolution to the more comprehensive concepts of reproductive health has been slow and moved by a few visionaries in the Obstetrics and Gynecology establishment and by the women's rights movement. Currently, the concept has been accepted at world conferences, such as those of Cairo (1994) and Beijing (1995). Brazil officially incorporated an even wider concept of Comprehensive Women's Health Care, originated at the State University of Campinas and formally adopted by the Federal Government in 1984. It was placed in practice in the state of São Paulo between 1987 and 1990, showing important improvements in the quantity and quality of services provided to women.

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