In a remarkable policy win for inclusive governance and children’s rights, the Dominican Republic has boosted its hospital birth registration coverage from just 61% in 2018 to over 90% as of 2025, the national Cabinet for Children and Adolescents (GANA) has announced. The milestone was formally marked this week during a ceremony renewing a cross-agency cooperation framework focused on eliminating birth under-registration across the country, extending the joint initiative for an additional four years through 2030.
The sweeping progress recorded over the past seven years stems from a series of targeted interventions rolled out by participating state institutions. National outreach and awareness campaigns have reached more than 700,000 expectant women across the country, educating them on the importance of timely birth registration for their children’s access to future services. In addition, authorities launched the specialized “Express Route” program, designed to streamline processes for people facing barriers to obtaining required supporting documentation. Most notably, permanent Civil Registry offices have now been established in every maternal and child health facility nationwide, bringing registration services directly to the point of birth.
The renewed cooperation agreement unites 18 key national stakeholders, including GANA, the National Council for Children and Adolescents (CONANI), the Central Electoral Board (JCE), the Ministry of the Presidency, and 14 other government and civil society bodies. The overarching goal of the extended partnership remains the same: to achieve universal birth registration within the country’s legal timeframe by ensuring every newborn is documented immediately after birth.
As part of the new phase of the initiative, authorities will upgrade cross-agency operations through new digital infrastructure. CONANI has led development of the innovative Registry System for Children and Adolescents (SIRENNA), a centralized digital platform that will enable secure real-time information sharing across all entities part of the national child protection system. The new tool is expected to drastically improve interinstitutional coordination and streamline public access to identity-related services.
In a key governance adjustment included in the renewed agreement, overall coordination of the initiative’s interinstitutional monitoring committee will be transferred to the JCE. The shift formally recognizes the JCE’s constitutional mandate as the state authority responsible for overseeing civil registry operations and all official identity documentation.
Speaking at the official signing ceremony, Dominican First Lady Raquel Arbaje underscored the life-altering impact of the work, stressing that no child should be discharged from a hospital without an official birth certificate. Arbaje noted that access to education, healthcare and nearly all other fundamental rights enshrined in national law depend entirely on holding formal legal identity documentation.
National officials emphasized that the extended cross-agency partnership will strengthen and embed a long-term public policy focused on upholding the fundamental right of every Dominican child to a legal identity. Once fully implemented, the initiative will ensure all children in the country can fully access the protections, social services and life opportunities guaranteed under Dominican law.
