Artificial intelligence and sexual reproductive health and rights: a technological leap towards achieving sustainable development goal target 3.7.
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Artificial intelligence and sexual reproductive health and rights: a technological leap towards achieving sustainable development goal target 3.7.
Target 3.7 of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) aims for universal access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services by 2030, including family planning services, information, education, and integration into national strategies. In contemporary times, reproductive medicine is progressively incorporating artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance sperm cell prediction and selection, in vitro fertilisation models, infertility and pregnancy screening. AI is being integrated into five core components of Sexual Reproductive Health, including improving care, providing high-quality contraception and infertility services, eliminating unsafe abortions, as well as facilitating the prevention and treatment of sexually transmitted infections. Though AI can improve sexual reproductive health and rights by addressing disparities and enhancing service delivery, AI-facilitated components have ethical implications, based on existing human rights and international conventions. Heated debates persist in implementing AI, particularly in maternal health, as well as sexual, reproductive health, as the discussion centers on a torn between human touch and machine-driven care. Despite this and other challenges, AI’s application in sexual and reproductive health and rights is crucial, particularly for developing countries, especially those that are yet to explore the application of AI in healthcare. Action plans are needed to roll out AI use in these areas effectively, and capacity building for health workers is essential to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals’ Target 3.7. This commentary discusses innovations in sexual and reproductive health and rights in meeting target 3.7 of the SDGs, with a focus on artificial intelligence and highlights the need for a more circumspect approach in response to the ethical and human rights implications of using AI in providing sexual and reproductive health services.
