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HEALTH AND FITNESS |
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Women
Deliver 2010
"At
the global level we don't only have the issue of deaths of women and
child, pregnancy and child-birth related situations, but it is the
discrepancy between these deaths in the northern and more industrialized
countries and in the developing countries. In fact, today as we speak we
know that practically no woman dies in child birth in Europe or North
America. But they do die in South Asia, Africa and Latin America"
said Dr Frederick Torgbor Sai, an internationally recognized gender and
reproductive health advocate from Ghana, who is the co-chair of
"Women Deliver 2010" in Washington DC, USA (7-9 June). Too
many women and newborns are dying worldwide during pregnancy and
childbirth. Every year, between 350,000 - 500,000 girls and women die
from pregnancy-related causes. Almost all of these deaths (99%) occur in
the developing world. Four million newborn babies die every year, also
from causes that are mainly preventable and typically linked to the
mother's health. "The
causes of maternal death are not very different. The technologies and
the approaches to do something about these deaths have been known for a
very long time. So why is it that we continue to see them so very
frequently in developing countries particularly in Asia and Africa.
Recently we have seen that these deaths are coming down in Latin America
and in many other parts of the world. Africa in particular doesn’t
show that it is coming down too much" said Dr Sai in an exclusive
interview to CNS. Dr
Sai was the moderator for the 1987 Safe Motherhood Conference which
launched the Safe Motherhood Initiative and chairman for the Main
Committees of the International Conference on Population in Mexico in
1984 and of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD),
in Cairo in 1994. It was this last conference which produced the
Programme of Action, emphasizing the centrality of women to all
development programmes and called for world attention to the improvement
in the status of women and for equity and equality between the sexes as
the basis of all human relationships. "When
we met in Cairo in 1994 we decided that for reproductive health services
the developing countries themselves should try to put in two-thirds and
advanced countries about a third. Many of the developing countries have
been keeping in money but the advanced countries' money indeed failed to
come and has been coming down particularly in the areas of family
planning which are the number one prevention for these deaths. So we
don't think that the developed countries, the industrialized countries
have contributed enough. The developing countries themselves too some of
them have not, I suppose majority of them are in Africa, in Asia, in
South Asia, haven't put in commensurate with the size of the problem,
they haven't put in enough" said Dr Sai. "I
believe particularly in South Asia and parts of Africa, if the status of
women can be improved, women's education, quality education, can be
given very more support, it would affect in improving the background for
reducing these death rates very much, I think" said Dr Sai. According
to Dr Sai, to reduce the mortality itself, we need: 1)
to have better facilities, better healthcare personnel trained for
handling emergency obstetric care, 2)
to have better treatment for women who are pregnant, improving care
around the delivery itself, 3)
to be prepared to have an emergency evacuation setup, that will link the
site of delivery to any emergency centre that will be able to handle
emergencies. One
of the problems with maternal mortality is that the major death rates
don't occur in people whom you can diagnose before they go into labour.
The majority of deaths occur around the time of labour or immediately
after the delivery. So these are true emergencies and the person
assisting in the delivery should be knowledgeable enough to respond to
these emergencies and know how to manage evacuation setup so that the
individual can be sent to these clinics. "Lack
of the facilities and lack of trained healthcare personnel at the
receiving clinic" are key impediments in saving women's lives, said
Dr Sai. "Sometimes the people go to these clinics and no one is
present and there is delay right inside the clinic. So we are trying to
reduce that period of delay in the clinics and expand the number of
clinics that can handle emergency obstetric care. Also emergency
evacuation services need to be organized" said Dr Sai. "These
are the things that can give confidence to the communities to bring the
people to these clinics rather than them to think that people go to the
clinics only to die" said Dr Sai. "We
have tried for so many years to try and wake up the consciousness of the
world to what we consider as a major fight to save women's lives. We
have been successful only to a small extent. We want to think that this
year 2010 is the beginning of the end of that battle - the battle we are
going to wage now and will be taken on worldwide and we will save the
women's lives" said Dr Sai. Dr
Sai has earlier served as Senior Population Advisor to the Word Bank,
President of International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) from
1989 to 1995; was recipient of the UN Population Award in 1993. Let
us hope that the Women Deliver 2010 turns Dr Sai's hopes into reality in
saving women's lives. _____________________________
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