WHO Launches Campaign
to Reduce Childbirth Deaths
The World Health Organization (WHO)
launched a training campaign to help reduce the number of maternal
deaths during childbirth in developing countries.
The WHO estimates one woman in
a developing country dies while giving birth every minute of the
day.
Women in poor countries have a
1-in-16 chance of dying in childbirth, compared to a 1-in-2,800
chance for women in wealthier countries, the United Nations health
agency said.
Sub-Saharan Africa and central
south Asia suffer the worst rates of maternal death. Most are
caused by bleeding, infection, obstructed labor and unsafe abortions.
The campaign's launch coincided
with the release of a new manual which aims to teach health providers
effective methods to prevent childbirth deaths in even the poorest
conditions, and how to gather information to improve statistics
on such deaths.
"It is time for all of us to turn
technical knowledge into action to save the lives of the women
who give life," said one of the authors, Dr Luc de Bernis. The
WHO estimates maternal deaths are under-reported by as much as
50 percent. Sixty-two countries have no maternal mortality data
at all.
"We have an invisible epidemic,"
Joy Phumaphi, the WHO's assistant director-general for family
and community health, said in a statement.
The campaign involves more than
a dozen international and regional agencies and will focus on
20 high-priority countries.
The WHO said $10 million more
was required to fund the initiative.
Reference
Source 89
September 29, 2004
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