In this issue of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, the first to center on global issues in gynecology, we present a raft of papers that focus on topics central to women's health globally, and which review the principle causes of morbidity and mortality among women worldwide. Indeed, while, for decades, the thrust of international programming, research, and advocacy, has been directed toward maternal mortality reduction, the fact is that the various clinical issues presented here account for the vast remainder of women's morbidity and mortality beyond maternity. Issues such as unmet need for contraception, unsafe abortion, cervical cancer prevention, sequelae of obstetrical fistula, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) incidence and management, female genital cutting (FGC), and menopause are currently at the core of both current global programming and research, and while many of these areas remain grossly underfunded compared with maternal mortality, considerable progress has been made towards improving the quality, duration and safety of women's lives worldwide, particularly in lower-income and middle-income countries (LMICs).In a commentary parallel to this foreword, Dame Professor Lesley Regan, former President of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and a renowned advocate for reproductive justice and equity in access to reproductive health care, and her coauthor Jenny Summerfield contribute a compelling assessment of progress (or lack thereof) towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals, specifically Sustainable Development Goal 5 aimed at empowering women and girls to achieve gender equity for both health care initiatives and full integration as part of their national social fabric. Their paper provides a lucid and logical link to considerations of maternal mortality, indicating that many of the issues discussed in this gynecologically focused edition of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology are part of a continuum of care seamlessly connected to maternal morbidity and mortality.Contraceptive technologies and family planning programs are consummate examples of primary prevention. In fact, in parallel to the current global experience connected to coronavirus disease (COVID) 19, one could consider all family planning programs to be "immunization" programs of sorts. In essence, given current technologies, birth controlThe author declares that there is nothing to disclose.