For too many adolescents across Ghana, Uganda, and Mozambique, growing up meant growing up without answers — about their bodies, their rights, or their futures.

Over five years (2021–2026), the Sexual Health and Reproductive Education (SHARE) project reached more than 425,000 young people across Ghana, Uganda, and Mozambique, transforming how adolescents learn about their bodies, rights, and futures through play, dialogue, and youth‑responsive systems.

Zoe and Miguel once lacked access to accurate, age‑appropriate health information. Through SHARE, they gained the knowledge and confidence to make informed choices. Watch their story from Mozambique.

Why SHARE Matters: Young People Deserved Better

Across Ghana, Uganda, and Mozambique, millions of adolescents grow up without reliable, age‑appropriate information about sexual and reproductive health (SRH). Taboos, gender inequality, and limited youth‑friendly services leave young people, especially girls, at risk of early pregnancy, school dropout, poor health outcomes, and lost potential.

Before SHARE, baseline findings across Ghana, Uganda, and Mozambique showed that adolescents often lacked basic or sufficient knowledge about their bodies, contraception, and available services. Even when services existed, they were not always easy to access—young people faced stigma, judgement, distance, cost barriers, and concerns about privacy. In many communities, open conversations about these topics were discouraged.

“We didn’t know before SHARE, but now we can choose when to have children.”
- Agnes, 22, Uganda

These challenges were especially significant for girls, increasing their risk of early pregnancy, school dropouts, sexual and gender‑based violence, and limited ability to make decisions about their own health and futures. These barriers were shaped not only by a lack of information, but also by the environments around them—at home, in schools, in communities, and within health systems.

Behind these gaps are deeper realities: unreliable information, healthcare that doesn't serve young people, and a silence rooted in stigma. In many communities, the belief that talking about sexual health encourages early activity goes largely unchallenged — leaving girls and boys without the opportunity to make informed choices about their bodies, relationships and futures.

These challenges are rooted not just in access, but in systems, norms, and silence. SHARE was designed to change that.

The SHARE project, funded by the Government of Canada through Global Affairs Canada, was implemented through a consortium led by Right To Play in partnership with FAWE, WaterAid, and local partners, with technical support from FHI 360. SHARE worked to advance gender equality by improving access to sexual and reproductive health education and gender-responsive care for adolescents and youth aged 10–24.

SHARE Program Spotlight - Web Crop 1
Across SHARE-supported schools, health clubs like this one use debates and drama to break taboos and spark conversations about sexual health, ensuring both girls and boys learn about topics like menstruation.

SHARE's Impact Across Countries

Across three countries, SHARE delivered measurable improvements in knowledge, access, and behaviour. More adolescents can identify and understand contraception options; more young people are seeking SRH services and support; and more girls are participating in advocacy and leading change in their communities.

Explore the impact SHARE made in classrooms, clinics, and communities.

“The health clubs and mentorship programs created environments where young people could ask questions, speak openly, support each other and build leadership skills.”
- Brenda, Right To Play Program Manager

SHARE strengthened sexual and reproductive health and rights for adolescents and young people in Ghana, Mozambique, and Uganda. It transformed relationships between young people, schools, communities, and health systems. Here’s how:

As a result of SHARE interventions, young people:

  • Protected their sexual and reproductive health
  • Delayed early pregnancy
  • Made informed choices about their future
  • Advocated for change in their communities

Desmond was one of thousands of boys who participated in SHARE's mentorship programs in Ghana — proof that gender equality in sexual health education means bringing young men into the conversation too. SHARE demonstrated what’s possible when education, health, and play come together to advance gender equality.

"Now, I understand how to avoid unwanted pregnancies." - Desmond, Male Mentee, Ghana

The Work Continues

SHARE has ended — but across Ghana, Uganda, and Mozambique, millions of adolescents are still growing up without the information they need to stay healthy, stay in school, and make informed choices about their futures.

The clubs, the trained health workers, the young leaders — they are still there. What they need is the resources to keep going.

Your gift can help train a health worker to serve young people with dignity. It can keep a girls' club running in a school where it's the only safe space to ask questions. It can put accurate, age-appropriate information in the hands of a girl who has never had it before.

The next 425,000 young people are waiting.

SHARE Program Spotlight - Web Crops
At a small school in Uganda, a teacher guides students gathered under a tree as they rehearse a play about puberty and health rights. Laughter and concentration fill the space as students take turns acting out scenes that help spark open conversations around topics once rarely discussed.
“Children understand so fast when you teach them through play.”
- Nelson, Right To Play Project Officer, Uganda

Meet the Youth, Teachers, and Health Workers Behind the Change

Behind the data are real stories of change. Meet the students, teachers and health workers who are breaking taboos, opening conversations, and transforming classrooms and communities.


The SHARE project is implemented by Right To Play, FAWE, WaterAid, and FHI 360, with financial support from the Government of Canada through Global Affairs Canada. It strengthened sexual and reproductive rights for more than 425,000 young people across Ghana, Uganda, and Mozambique.

GAC partners-partenaires-colors-en.png - Global Affairs Canada