Posts Tagged ‘maternal morbidity’

Silent Suffering: Maternal Morbidities in Developing Countries

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011 by Christopher Lindahl

The Woodrow Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative in coordination with the Maternal Health Task Force and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) invite you to a discussion of:

 

Silent Suffering: Maternal Morbidities in Developing Countries
Tuesday, September 27, 2011, 3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington DC
5th Floor Conference Room
Please RSVP to globalhealth@wilsoncenter.org with your name and affiliation.

 

featuring
Karen Beattie, Project Director, Fistula Care at EngenderHealth
Ann Blanc, Director, Maternal Health Task Force (MHTF)
Karen Hardee, President, Hardee Associates
Marge Koblinsky, Senior Technical Advisor, John Snow Inc.

 

For every mother that dies in childbirth another 20 women experience acute chronic morbidities or “near misses” that would otherwise result in death. The scope of maternal morbidities is diverse and the most prevalent types include anemia, fistula, infertility, uterine prolapse and maternal depression. Morbidities can cause serious pain, stigma, and suffering as well as negative social and economic consequences. Additional data is needed to measure the prevalence and effects of morbidities and safe motherhood programs should expand their focus to address these life-altering conditions.

 

Ann Blanc, Director, MHTF, will chair the dialogue session and discuss the prevalence of maternal morbidities in developing countries. Karen Hardee, President, Hardee Associates, will highlight programmatic approaches to address different types of morbidities and recommend key actions to improve maternal morbidity. Karen Beattie, Project Director, Fistula Care at EngenderHealth, will discuss the fistula morbidity and share lessons learned in prevention and treatment. Marge Koblinsky, Senior Technical Advisor, John Snow Inc., will present a case study of maternal morbidity in Bangladesh and the mental, social, and economic impact of morbidity on women and their families.

 

About the 2011 Maternal Health Dialogue Series
As one of the few forums dedicated to maternal health, the Woodrow Wilson Center’s 2011 Advancing Dialogue on Maternal Health series brings together senior-level policymakers, academic researchers, media, and civil servants from the U.S. government and foreign consuls to identify challenges and discuss strategies for advancing the maternal health agenda.

 

In order to promote greater voices from the field, the 2011 dialogue is partnering with the African Population and Health Research Center in Kenya to co-host a two-part dialogue series with local, regional, and national decision-makers on effective maternal health policies and programs. These in-country dialogue meetings will create a platform for field workers, policymakers, program managers, media, and donors to share research, disseminate lessons learned, and address concerns related to policy, institutional, and organizational capacity building.

 

The Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative is pleased to present this series with its co-conveners, the Maternal Health Task Force and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), and is grateful to USAID’s Bureau for Global Health for further technical assistance.

 

If you are interested, but unable to attend the event, please tune into the live or archived webcast at www.wilsoncenter.org. The webcast will begin approximately 10 minutes after the posted meeting time. You will need Windows Media Player to watch the webcast. To download the free player, visit: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/download.

 

Location: Woodrow Wilson Center at the Ronald Reagan Building: 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW (”Federal Triangle” stop on Blue/Orange Line), 5th floor conference room. A map to the Center is available at www.wilsoncenter.org/directions. Note: Photo identification is required to enter the building. Please allow additional time to pass through security.

  • Share/Bookmark

WASH for Mothers: Water, Sanitation and Maternal Health: Inter-dependent Systems Challenges

Monday, August 22nd, 2011 by Christopher Lindahl


Photo courtesy of Water.org

 

The following post is part of a series of posts, WASH for Mothers, exploring water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) and maternal health. It is written by Margaret Catley-Carlson who is currently Chair of the Board of the Crop Diversity Trust, and the Foresight Advisory Committee for Group Suez Environment. She is a patron of the Global Water Partnership, a member of the UN Secretary General’s Advisory Board, World Economic Forum Global Advisory Council on Water, the Rosenberg Forum, and serves on the boards of the Syngenta Foundation, IFDC (Fertilizer Management), the World Food Prize And Tyler prize. To read other posts in the series, click here.

 

All of us working to break the cycle of poverty that holds hostage too many people in the world are tracking closely the progress of the Millennium Development Goals which are set for review in 2015. The eight MDGs cover the gamut of issues that keep that cycle of poverty spinning, and they are inextricably linked. Goals 5(a) and 7(c) are perfect examples. The former aims to ‘reduce by three quarters the maternal mortality ratio, and the latter aims to “halve… the proportion of the population without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.”

 

Experts agree: access to clean water and sanitation is essential for healthy pregnancies and childbirth. Vitamin deficiencies, trachoma and hepatitis can be caused by unsanitary conditions and poor hygiene. Anemia, one of the 5 major causes of maternal death and disability, is most often associated with malnutrition, but it can also be caused by intestinal worms or malaria both of which occur when clean water and safe sanitation are lacking.

 

Fifteen percent of all maternal deaths are caused by infections in the 6 weeks after childbirth mainly due to unhygienic conditions during home deliveries and in institutions. Another of the 5 major causes of maternal death and disability, sepsis, is caused when clean water and adequate sanitation are not available to a woman during labor and childbirth.

 

Environmental stability and maternal health are both systems issues. Clean water and sanitation are essential factors in our collective efforts to eradicate preventable maternal mortality and morbidities. The logic here is clear: If humanity is to break the poverty cycle once and for all, we must address concomitantly the fundamentals that weaken the systems needed to provide and sustain good health.

  • Share/Bookmark

Inspired by Young Champions on IWD

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011 by Christopher Lindahl

Written by: Ann Blanc, Director, MHTF

 

International Women’s Day is a day dedicated to celebrating the achievements of women past, present, and future. As I reflect on this day, I am especially inspired by the achievements of the Young Champions of Maternal Health – their current achievements, but also the promise of the future that they represent. If you read the blog posts written by the Young Champions here on the MHTF site, I think you will be inspired too. Many of them have been placed in wholly unfamiliar environments and are bravely learning to adapt, identifying many similarities between the problems they have seen in their own countries and those in their temporary homes.

 

For example, Sara Al-Lamki from Oman is working with Yayasan Rama Sesana, an NGO in Bali that focuses on reproductive health education and services for market women in Denpasar, Bali’s capital. She acknowledges being way out of her comfort zone and facing many challenges, but has become even more determined to ‘change the face of reproductive health in the Arab world and beyond.’ Egwaoje Ifeyinwa Madu from Nigeria is working in New Orleans with Ashoka Fellow Kathryn Hall-Trujillo on the Birthing Project, which pairs “SisterFriends” with vulnerable young mothers. In the course of her work, she is also learning about adapting the model to the Nigerian context, writing funding proposals, and partnering with local businesses – all lessons that she plans to take back to Nigeria to launch her own project. And Carolina Damasio is living in Mali and working with an organization called APAF Muso Danbé to develop her idea – The Art of Being Born – of using artistic techniques and music to do health education with impoverished rural mothers and improve the mother-baby bond.

 

With women like these (and men too!) developing into future leaders in the maternal health community, it is easy to be optimistic about the day when we will celebrate the eradication of preventable maternal mortality and morbidity.

  • Share/Bookmark

Reminder: Maternal Health at CSW

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011 by Christopher Lindahl

This afternoon, starting at 3:00pm EST, maternal health will be the focus of a panel at the 55th Commission on the Status of Women at UN Headquarters in New York. To watch “Elimination of preventable maternal mortality and morbidity and the empowerment of women” click here and choose Channel 3.

 

According to the issues paper providing the background on the panel discussion:

This discussion will be an opportunity for the Commission to assess progress in
addressing maternal mortality, identify good practices and successful interventions, as
well as ways and means for further accelerating action with the aim of measurably
reducing and eliminating maternal mortality, and achieving MDG 5. It will also be an
opportunity to bring further impetus to implementation of the Secretary-General’s Global
strategy for women’s and children’s health
.

  • Share/Bookmark

Commission on the Status of Women Underway in New York

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011 by Christopher Lindahl

The 55th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women is underway at UN headquarters in New York and will run through March 4th. The proceedings began yesterday with the focus on “Access and participation of women and girls in education, training, science and technology, including for the promotion of women’s equal access to full employment and decent work.” On Tuesday, March 1, there is a panel planned on the “Elimination of preventable maternal mortality and morbidity and the empowerment of women.” It will feature panelists from UNFPA, UNICEF, UNDP, WHO, the World Bank, GAVI and the Global Fund. For some background on the discussion, the CSW published an Issues Paper that outlines what you can expect from the panel.

 

Many of the panels and roundtable discussions can be viewed online either live or archived via the UN website.

  • Share/Bookmark

Beyond Maternal Mortality Investigations: Improving Maternal Morbidity Surveillance in Anuradhapura Sri Lanka

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010 by Christopher Lindahl

The following is part of a series of project updates from the Department of Community Medicine at Rajarata University of Sri Lanka. MHTF is supporting their project, Measuring Economic Impact of Maternal Morbidity. More information on MHTF supported projects can be found here.

Written by: Department of Community Medicine

Maternal mortality has been given a high priority in public health system in Sri Lanka during last few decades. As a result, Sri Lanka has achieved exceptional progress in reducing maternal mortality, which has been an exemplary role model to other developing countries. It has a strong maternal death investigation procedure with one of the best maternal death surveillance systems in the developing world. The next step in reducing maternal mortality in Sri Lanka would be reducing maternal morbidities. Surveillance being the corner stone of any type of disease prevention programme, a well established surveillance system on maternal morbidities is an urgent need. However, maternal morbidity surveillance in Sri Lanka is still in its initial stage.

Project team members with MHTF staff during GMHC 2010 conference

Project team members with MHTF staff during GMHC 2010 conference


As a part of “Disease Burden and the Economic Impact of Maternal Morbidity” project we carried out an analysis of routinely reported data on maternal morbidities for a three year period in Anuradhapura district, Sri Lanka. Further, a sample of pregnancy reports of recently delivered mothers were also analyzed in order to understand the current status of maternal morbidity surveillance. Specific sample survey was conducted on assessing screening procedures for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus.

The first part of the analysis was on 45,544 deliveries during 2007-9 period. Reported prevalence of PIH, GDM and Anemia was 1.71% (779), .37% (169) and 2.66% (1033) respectively. Analysis of pregnancy records also revealed similar rates (This analysis was presented in First Global Maternal Health Conference). Data on maternal morbidity obtained in this study do not correspond with the global figures and figures from studies done elsewhere in Sri Lanka. As an example, prevalence of GDM, PIH and Anemia were reported as 10%, 8% and 30% respectively in previous studies. The results of this initial analysis show gross underreporting of maternal morbidity in the study area. A major effort is needed to improve the quality and completeness of these data in order to achieve further reduction of maternal mortality by reducing maternal morbidity.

In the GDM screaming method assessment, a total of 223 pregnant mothers with a period of amenorrhea more than 24 weeks were selected from 20 public health midwife areas. Altogether 95 (42.6%) mothers had risk factors for GDM. Of which only 6 mothers had PPBS during the first trimester. Of the 223 mothers studied, not a single mother was diagnosed as having GDM. Thus GDM was grossly under diagnosed. This could have severe consequences on pregnancy outcome with deprivation of both maternal and child health conditions. (This analysis was presented in Annual Scientific sessions of Ceylon College of Physicians by Dr.N.J.Dahanayake and awarded as the best paper in endocrinology and diabetes).

Project Coordinator explaining the use of IMMPACT tool kit in Sri Lanka to Professor Wendy Graham during GMHC 2010 conference

Project Coordinator explaining the use of IMMPACT tool kit in Sri Lanka to Professor Wendy Graham during GMHC 2010 conference

The project team is currently working on determining the true burden of these morbidities in the study through a prevalence study. Primary objective of this study is to provide service providers and policy makers with high quality data on maternal morbidities and improve maternal morbidity surveillance. District level public health administrators are working hand in hand with the project team in this regard.

More information is available on the project’s website.

  • Share/Bookmark

Centre for Development and Population Activities, India

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010 by Christopher Lindahl

The following is part of a series of project updates from the Centre for Development and Population Activities (CEDPA). MHTF is supporting their project, Working on Integration Issues of HIV/AIDS and Maternal Health. More information on MHTF supported projects can be found here.

Written by: CEDPA

CEDPA will combat India’s high maternal mortality and morbidity rates by demonstrating the value of integrating maternal health programs into programs targeting HIV/AIDS. Using forums, workshops and consultations, CEDPA will evaluate existing programs of the government’s National Rural Health Mission, the National AIDS Control Programme and the National Health Policy Administration in the Rajasthan area in order to compile best practices and build consensus on a policy brief of recommendations for policy-makers.


The team began a desk review of policies on integration and convergence of services as evident from various programs in progress, as well as a review of global and national best practices in integration of maternal health, family planning, and reproductive health and HIV services is in progress. In the next several months the team will undertake a number of activities including: collating secondary data on the basis of the desk review of global and national data highlighting the need, purpose and linkages in integration on MH-HIV issues, documenting global and national best practices in integration of maternal health, family planning, and reproductive health and HIV services. We will also develop a matrix and framework for documenting existing best practices and share the matrix with different organizations to receive specific case studies on the program.

  • Share/Bookmark

Traditional Birth Assistants in Malawi

Monday, October 18th, 2010 by Christopher Lindahl

Last week, Malawi’s President Bingu wa Mutharika lifted a ban on traditional birth attendants (TBAs) that had been in place since 2007, saying:

We need to train traditional birth attendants in safer delivery methods. We should not completely stop them because their work is very important. We should train them to assist us in addressing the health challenges that we are facing.

 

Expanding opportunities for non-physicians to act as skilled birth attendants may help to stem the tide of maternal deaths in countries where doctors, midwives and nurses may not exist in the needed numbers. Evidence suggests that having a skilled birth attendant present at birth leads to fewer incidences maternal and child mortality and morbidity. If TBAs are properly trained as Mutharika suggests, they may be able to play a major role in reducing Malawi’s high maternal mortality ratio.

 

In January 2010, with the support of MHTF and UNFPA, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars hosted a Maternal Health Policy Dialogue on “Human Resources for Maternal Health: Midwives, TBAs and Task-Shifting.” To view the webcast and read the event summary, click here. For other events in the Policy Dialogue Series, click here.

  • Share/Bookmark

Making Outpatient Abortion Services a Reality

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010 by KateMitch

Written by Janna Oberdorf, Women Deliver

Every year, an estimated 20 million unsafe abortions take place. And of all maternal deaths, unsafe abortion accounts for 13%. Imagine if we could change that. Imagine if we could make a serious dent in the deaths and morbidities that are caused from botched abortions, from unhygienic surgeries, and from unskilled providers.

Now, imagine if we could change that with a few simple, low-cost pills. That’s what the drugs mifepristone and misoprostol are doing for women around the world.

At today’s panel session on “Reducing the toll of unsafe abortion using simple medical technology” at the Global Maternal Health Conference in Delhi, panelists laid out the landscape of how introducing and expanding access to medical abortions could save lives and prevent injury:

•    Beverly Winikoff, of Gynuity Health Projects, talked about misoprostol as first-line treatment of incomplete abortion, and about introducing and expanding existing services and implications for training. As she said, misoprostol is low cost, and it can increase women’s choice and reduce the burden on doctors and health facilities.

•    Patricio Sanhueza Smith, from the Secretariat of Health in Mexico City, talked about lessons learned from Mexico City on the potential of misoprostol alone for transitioning services. He said, “Medical abortion with misoprostol alone is not the Gold Standard, but it is a duty to widely disseminate its use, while mifepristone becomes available.”

•    Selma Hajiri, of the Center for Research and Consultancy in Reproductive Health, talked about a randomized controlled trial of medical abortion with misoprostol only versus mifepristone plus misoprostol. She said that although the combination is the gold standard, misoprostol alone should be promoted where mifepristone is not accessible.

•    Kelsey Lynd, of Stanford University, spoke about making outpatient services a reality. She discussed research on administering mifepristone and misoprostol at home, and a pregnancy test that could simplify medical abortion provision.

•    Hillary Bracken, of Gynuity Health Projects, spoke about expanding access late in the first trimester, and the promise of outpatient mifepristone and misoprostol after 63 days.

Though I’m constantly amazed by the possibility and potential of mifepristone and misoprostol for safe abortion, I was even more amazed to hear about Kelsey Lynd’s work on making outpatient services a reality.

Having an abortion is a difficult and traumatic decision, with serious health repercussions. But that decision becomes so much harder when you have to pay for a sonogram to determine gestation period; to attend a clinic to take the mifepristone; to return to the clinic two week later for a follow-up visit and second dose; and to have a second sonogram to ensure the pregnancy was terminated. It’s a time-consuming and costly decision… but every one of those steps also takes an emotional toll.

Lynd presented research that showed that it is safe for women to self-administer mifepristone and misoprostol at home. Though this is great news for time and money saving reasons, it also gives women some control and choice over when to start their abortion.

Lynd also presented findings on a home pregnancy test that determine their pregnancy status after abortion. This semi-quantitative pregnancy test is administered at the health facility while the woman is pregnant to achieve a baseline of her hCG blood level. Then, 1 to 2 weeks after the woman has been administered mifepristone and misoprostol, she can use the test to check if her hCG blood level has decreased, thus confirming termination of pregnancy. In her findings, 98% of women felt they could use the test on their own in the future, and the tests identified ALL ongoing pregnancies.

The implications for this research are mind-boggling. I think it is obvious that cutting down clinic visits and sonograms would save time (for the woman and the provider) and save money. But it is the emotional implications that jump out at me. The ability for women to feel they have some control over their bodies and their abortions is something that is severely needed.

One last note is that although these findings are encouraging in making outpatient services a reality, they must be partnered with education, information, and counseling. Home abortions are a scary thing. Bleeding for days on end is a scary thing. And women need to understand complications that need treatment, and have some emotional support. We need to guide these women with the proper education, counseling, call centers, job-aids, and more, if and when we finally make outpatient services a reality.

Janna Oberdorf is the Communications Manager at Women Deliver.

Follow the Maternal Health Task Force and EngenderHealth on Twitter: @MHTF and @EngenderHealth. The conference hashtag is #GMHC2010.

For more posts about the Global Maternal Health Conference, click here.

For the live stream schedule, click here.

Check back soon for the archived videos of today’s presentations.

  • Share/Bookmark

Global Progress on Maternal Health: The Numbers and their Implications

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 by Raji Mohanam

Written by Kate Mitchell, Maternal Health Task Force

The opening plenary, Global progress on maternal health: the numbers and their implications, of the Global Maternal Health Conference 2010 in Delhi focused on global progress on maternal health and explored recent maternal mortality estimates. Speakers discussed the numbers and asked questions not only about what the numbers mean–but also about how the maternal health community can use the numbers.

Over-arching questions from the session were:

Which numbers should we use, those published in the recent Lancet report or those soon to be published by the United Nations (presuming that the numbers will be quite different)?

Will these two sets of numbers prove to be a hurdle in the struggle to bring unity to the maternal health community? If so, how can we reconcile this and avoid a divide in the community?

Will the two sets of numbers push the maternal health community to establish better and more robust methods of measuring maternal mortality and morbidity?

Has the maternal health community collectively neglected the measurement of maternal morbidity–and how can we begin to focus on measuring not only mortality but morbidity as well?

Brief insights from the opening plenary speeches:

Rafael Lozano, Professor of Global Health at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, succinctly summarized the  statistical analysis behind the recent Lancet publication in one slide. (Presentations will soon be available online here: www.maternalhealthtaskforce.org/gmhc2010) He also described many of the lessons learned from the research that led to the Lancet piece–the gaining of ground in the reduction of maternal mortality, an improved picture of what the key drivers of progress really are, the correlation between HIV/AIDS and maternal health outcomes, and the importance of communication with countries and local researchers.

Lale Say, Medical Doctor and Epidemiologist at the World Health Organization, discussed the inter-agency approach of monitoring progress on maternal health–stressing the importance of country level consultations and technical collaboration. While she did not present the latest maternal mortality estimates, she talked in depth about the methodology that the World Health Organization, UNICEF, UNFPA, and the World Bank use to estimate global maternal mortality.

Wendy J. Graham, Principal Investigator with Immpact at the University of Aberdeen, urged the maternal health community to understand that failure is not a bad word.  She explained that we often emphasize the successes of our efforts so much so that we neglect to learn from our failures. Wendy also reiterated the importance of context when implementing maternal health programs saying, “context, context, context”–and explaining that because an initiative succeeds in one place, there is no guarantee that it will succeed in the next. We must consider the unique context of each setting where we work.

Saroj Pachauri, Regional Director for South and East Asia at the Population Council, asked a number of thought provoking questions throughout her presentation; We count numbers but do numbers count for policy change? Is there a culture of evidence-based programming? How can we address measurement challenges and improve the use of information? Saroj also noted staggering inequities in maternal deaths between and within countries. She explained that the lifetime risk of maternal death in South Asia is 1 in 43 compared to 1 in 30,000 in Sweden–citing this as an example of a failure to bridge the divide between rich and poor.

For more brief insights from our conference presenters, follow the Maternal Health Task Force and EngenderHealth on Twitter: @MHTF and @EngenderHealth. The conference hashtag is #GMHC2010.

For more posts about the Global Maternal Health Conference, click here.

For the live stream schedule, click here.

Check back soon for the archived videos of the conference presentations.

  • Share/Bookmark