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‎20 September 2008 - Progress for Children Report Highlights Risk of Maternal ‎Mortality.

Nearly all maternal deaths occur in developing countries; over 80 per ‎cent in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

A new global report on maternal mortality, released by UNICEF today, highlights the risks faced ‎during pregnancy and childbirth by women in developing countries. ‎

Progress for Children: A Report Card on Maternal Mortality states that, according to the latest ‎data, more than 99 per cent of all maternal deaths occur in developing countries, with some ‎
‎84 per cent concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.‎

‎“The tragic fact is that every year more than half a million women lose their lives around the ‎world as a result of complications due to pregnancy or childbirth,” said Peter Salama, UNICEF’s ‎global Chief of Health. ‎

‎“The causes of maternal mortality are clear – as are the means to combat them. Yet women ‎continue to die unnecessarily.” ‎

Haemorrhage is the most common cause of death, particularly in Africa and Asia. A woman’s ‎overall health – including her nutritional level and HIV status – also influences the chances of a ‎positive outcome to her pregnancy and childbirth. Other influences include societal factors, such ‎as poverty, inequity and general attitudes towards women and their health. Maternal mortality ‎rates are often impacted by cultural or traditional practices that often prevent women from ‎seeking delivery or post-partum care. ‎
‎ ‎
In the developing world, the risk of death from complications relating to pregnancy and childbirth ‎over the course of a woman’s lifetime is one in 76, compared with one in 8,000 in the ‎industrialized world. The riskiest place to give birth is Niger, where that risk is estimated to be ‎one in seven. In all Sudan, according to the 2006 Sudan Household Health Survey, the maternal ‎mortality ratio is 1,107 deaths per 100,000 live births, but the survey also highlighted disparities ‎between the states – in Western Equatoria State in Southern Sudan the figure is as high as ‎‎2,327, believed to be among the highest recorded maternal mortality ratio in the world.‎

Most maternal deaths are avoidable. A key to avoiding them is better health care – particularly ‎during pregnancy, delivery and in the post-partum period. Interventions that improve maternal ‎health include: antenatal care, provider-initiated HIV testing and counseling, skilled attendance ‎at birth, emergency obstetric care, post-partum care and family planning in keeping with ‎national policies. When offered across a continuum of care that integrates home, community, ‎outreach and facility-based services, these interventions can have multiple benefits for mothers, ‎children and the communities in which they live. ‎

There have been some promising areas of improvement in maternal health interventions in ‎recent years. Coverage of antenatal care throughout the developing world has increased by ‎
‎15 percentage points in the past decade, with 75 per cent of expectant mothers now receiving
some antenatal care. At the same time, many countries have boosted coverage of skilled ‎delivery attendance. In parts of Asia, for example, the proportion of women who have a skilled ‎attendant present during delivery jumped from 31 to 40 per cent between 1995 and 2005. ‎Increases have also been seen in many African countries. Ensuring that skilled personnel are ‎present at all deliveries and that these personnel have access to emergency care where ‎necessary is the most effective means of saving the lives of mothers. ‎

However the pace of progress towards reaching the Millennium Development Goal on maternal ‎health, which calls for a 75 per cent reduction in the maternal mortality ratio between 1990 and ‎‎2015, has been too slow throughout the developing world and must now be accelerated if the ‎goal is to be reached. ‎

To achieve the MDG target, maternal health must be addressed as part of a continuum of care ‎that connects essential maternal, newborn and child health services.  Indeed, levels of maternal ‎mortality often reflect the overall performance of a country’s national health system – ‎particularly during delivery and in the postnatal period, when mothers and newborns are most ‎vulnerable. To fill this critical gap, services that benefit both mother and child need to be scaled ‎up, as the health of the mother is closely linked to that of her newborn.‎

‎“Saving mothers’ lives is not only a moral imperative, but a sound investment that benefits their ‎children, their families, their communities and their countries,” said Tessa Wardlaw, UNICEF’s ‎global Chief of Statistics and Monitoring. “Indeed, there is a clear connection between maternal ‎health and other Millennium Development Goals, such as eradicating extreme poverty, reducing ‎child mortality, and combating HIV and AIDS and other diseases.”‎

 

 
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