People have figured out how their own weather patterns work so they are able to time growing season correctly. Yet, there are still surprise storms that come and wipe out everything that they have spent the past year working on. A certain season may come sooner than predicted which results in the loss of crops. It is also harder for people to pick up where they left off after that. Developing countries do not have access to equipment that helps them plant and watch their crops. Once they lose their crops, a whole years worth of work is gone and they are expected to start over. If these people receive reproductive health education they would have few mouths to feed, which means less crops to grow and less forests become destroyed. If they do have a weather crisis there would be less panic because they could save some of the food and use that while they start over.
When a person has the correct reproductive health care information, it is proven by that they live a better life style, earn more money, and take better care of their children. Women with access to this information tend to have fewer children and are more comfortable with what goes on in their lives. In Angola and Afghanistan, where contraception usage is the lowest, less then 10 percent of couples use effective family planning. (World) However, due to increased contraceptive use, women in developing countries are having half as many children then they did 35 years ago. Many times women in developing countries have birth control methods "pushed" on them for the experiment of the method, just to see the side effects. Hormonal contraceptives are given to women without first receiving a medical check-up and they are not told what the side effects will be. When women in India, Nepal, and Pakistan were given medical check-ups, the results were that 50-60 percent of them had one or more reproductive health problems. (Associated, D6) In 2000, 98 percent of the 3.