The theme for this year’s International Day of Families is ‘Families and Climate Change’ which aims to raise awareness about how climate change affects families and the role the families can play in climate action. Climate change negatively impacts the health and well-being of families through increased pollution, while extreme weather events exacerbated by climate change, such as hurricanes, droughts and floods, often lead to forced displacement and loss of livelihoods for families and individuals.
Here’s to strong families in all their beautiful forms!
#InternationalDayofFamilies
#InternationalFamilyDay
General
Go Moms!
Biological, step, in-law, foster, adoptive. We celebrate all of our moms this weekend. #MothersDay2024 #MomLove
International Day of the Midwife (IDM) – May 5, 2024
The theme for this year’s International Day of the Midwife (IDM), is Midwives: A Vital Climate Solution. How do these two things intersect?
A midwife is a healthcare provider who is trained to provide uncomplicated obstetric and gynecological services.
Climate change is one of the greatest health challenges of our time. Our warming planet has more heatwaves, more floods, and more natural disasters that significantly impact the health of women and babies.
Midwives are a vital solution in adapting health systems to climate change, and lowering carbon emissions overall. Midwives deliver safe and environmentally sustainable health services and are first responders when climate disasters hit.
Eliminate the stigma of living without children
Some decide to stop family building efforts due to emotional and financial limits. Intense grief is a part of the journey into “childless not by choice” or “childfree after infertility”. Let’s be understanding that infertility journeys do not always end with little ones. Let’s eliminate the stigma by acknowledging people have meaning without children. Let’s break the stereotypes.
#CANBACE
#WeCanAll
#NIAW2024
#ResolveInfertility
Eliminate the stigma of sperm donation
Sperm donation is becoming more common. Reasons include increasing male infertility, more women choosing to be single parents, and lesbian couples taking advantage of more favorable laws. About ½ million women in the United States have used donor insemination to conceive children.