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  • 2019-07-29 (xsd:date)
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  • No, WHO won’t classify people unable to find sex partner as ‘disabled’ (en)
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  • Inability to find a sexual partner is a disability – WHO, reads the headline to an article in the Star , a Kenyan news site. The article claims the World Health Organization is considering new guidelines to classify any person who is unable to find a suitable sexual partner or get pregnant after 12 months or more of regular unprotected sex as disabled. Is this true? We checked. Origin of the rumour The Star’s article is dated 8 June 2019. But the claim first appeared in a 2016 story by the UK’s Telegraph newspaper. The Telegraph story says t hat the inability to find a suitable sexual partner – or the lack of sexual relationships which could achieve conception – could be considered an equal disability. Later on in the article Dr David Adamson, one of the authors of the new guidelines is quoted, explaining the supposed change and its legal implications. Africa Check asked the WHO for comment on the accuracy of the story. No, it’s not true, spokesperson Christian Lindmeier told Africa Check. WHO has not changed its definition of infertility An October 2016 statement , issued a day after the Telegraph story was published, said that the WHO had not changed its definition of infertility. WHO is not planning to make any changes to the definition of infertility. WHO is currently developing guidelines on the diagnosis and management of infertility. These guidelines will not revise the definition of infertility, the global health body said. The fact-checking unit of Agence France Presse, AFP Fact Check , also spoke to the fertility expert, Dr Adamson, who was quoted by the Telegraph. I was very clear in stating this was not the accep ted WHO definition or policy in 2016. It is not now either. Unfortunately, this fact was not clearly stated in the article, he told AFP Fact Check . Similarly, Rudi Eggers, the WHO representative for Kenya, also very clearly said that WHO does not classify infertility as a disability, since disability is neither simply a biological nor a social phenomenon. – Grace Gichuhi (en)
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