Posts Tagged ‘United Nations Population Fund’
Wednesday, October 27th, 2010 by Christopher Lindahl
Please join the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative, the Maternal Health Task Force, and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) today at 3:00PM for the eighth event of the series on Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health: New Applications for Existing Technologies to Improve Maternal Health. For event details, click here.
If you are interested, but unable to attend the event, please tune into the live or archived webcast, which will begin approximately 10 minutes after the posted meeting time. You will need Windows Media Player to watch the webcast.
Tags: maternal health policy, Maternal Health Policy Series, MHTF, technology, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, Woodrow Wilson Center, Woodrow Wison International Center for Scholars
Posted in Announcements, News | No Comments »
Monday, July 19th, 2010 by KateMitch
Please join the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative, the Maternal Health Task Force, and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) for the sixth event of the series on Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health.

featuring
Mayra Buvinic, Sector Director Gender and Development Group, World Bank
Dr. Nomonde Xundu, Health Attaché Embassy of South Africa in Washington DC
Mary Ellen Stanton, Senior Maternal Health Advisor, U.S. Agency for International Development
July 29, 2010
3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
5th Floor Conference Room
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Please RSVP to globalhealth@wilsoncenter.org with your name and affiliation.
Investing in women and girls health is smart economics. According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) women contribute to a majority of small businesses in the developing world and their unpaid work on the farm and at home account for one-third of the world’s GDP. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) estimates that maternal and newborn deaths cost the world $15 billion in lost productivity.
Mayra Buvinic, sector director of the gender and development group of the World Bank, will address the economic impact of maternal deaths and the role of education and gender equality on economic development. Dr. Nomonde Xundu, health attaché at the Embassy of South Africa in Washington DC will discuss the policy implications of maternal health and share lessons learned in empowering women and girl’s economic status in South Africa. Mary Ellen Stanton, senior maternal health advisor of USAID, will present the foreign policy and economic case for increased donor investment in maternal health.
About the Maternal Health Policy Series
The reproductive and maternal health community finds itself at a critical point, drawing increased attention and funding, but still confronting more than a half million deaths each year and a high unmet need for family planning. The Policy Dialogue series seeks to galvanize the community by focusing on important issues within the maternal health community.
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.
Tags: Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health, donor investment, Dr. Nomonde Xundu, economic case, economic impact, economic status, Embassy of South Africa in Washington DC, empowering women and girls, family planning, foreign policy, Gender and Development Group, Mary Ellen Stanton, maternal death, maternal health, Maternal Health Task Force, maternal morbidity, maternal mortality, Mayra Buvinic, MHTF, newborn death, newborn health, policy implications, small businesses, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, unmet need, unpaid work, USAID, webcast, Woodrow Wilson Center's Global Health Initiative, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, World Bank
Posted in Announcements, Meetings, News, Opportunities, Policy | No Comments »
Monday, May 17th, 2010 by KateMitch
Reminder: This event will occur this Thursday, May 20th!
Please join the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative, the Maternal Health Task Force, and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) for the fifth event of the series on Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health.

This event will feature:
Víctor Conde Altamirano, Obstetric Nets Manager, CARE Bolivia
John Koku Awoonor-Williams, East Regional Director, Ghana Health Service
Subodh Satyawadi, Chief Operating Officer, GVK Emergency Management & Research Institute of India
Patricia Bailey, Public Health Specialist, Family Health International and Columbia University.
May 20, 2010
3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
6th Floor Flom Auditorium
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Please RSVP to globalhealth@wilsoncenter.org with your name and affiliation.
Access to skilled birth attendants and emergency obstetric care are key solutions to improving maternal morality, yet functioning referral systems and poor road infrastructure delay efficient care. Increased research, funding, knowledge sharing, and coordination between private and public sectors are necessary to make transportation and referral a global health priority.
Today’s discussion will highlight the lessons and knowledge gaps identified at a Wilson Center workshop in Washington DC with 25 experts from the transportation and maternal health communities, as well as representatives from the private sector and donor community.
Víctor Conde Altamirano, obstetric nets manager, CARE-Bolivia will discuss how transportation and referral data is being incorporated into Bolivia’s health system to improve maternal health. John Koku Awoonor-Williams, east regional director, Ghana Health Service, will address the utilization and maintenance of ambulances in rural Ghana. Subodh Satyawadi, chief operating officer, GVK Emergency Management Institute will discuss the lessons learned and challenges faced through India’s “Emergency 108” call system. Strategies and recommendations identified at the Wilson Center workshop in Washington DC will be provided by Patricia Bailey, public health specialist, Family Health International.
About the Maternal Health Policy Series
The reproductive and maternal health community finds itself at a critical point, drawing increased attention and funding, but still confronting more than a half million deaths each year and a high unmet need for family planning. The Policy Dialogue series seeks to galvanize the community by focusing on important issues within the maternal health community.
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. The Averting Maternal Death and Disability (AMDD) program at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health provided valuable technical assistance to this transportation and referral meeting.
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), 6th Floor Flom Auditorium. 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.
For information on previous and future events in this series, click here.
Tags: Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health, ambulances, AMDD, Averting Maternal Death and Disability, Bolivia, CARE Bolivia, Columbia University, Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, Emergency 108, emergency obstetric care (EmOC), Family Health International, Ghana, Ghana Health Service, GVK Emergency Management and Research Institute of India, India, John Koku Awoonor-Williams, knowledge sharing, Maternal Health Task Force, maternal heatlh, Patricia Bailey, policy discussion, referral, research, road infrastructure, rural Ghana, skilled birth attendants, Subodh Satyawadi, technical assistance, Transportation, transportation and referral, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, USAID's Bureau for Global Health, Victor Conde Altamirano, Washington DC, webcast, Woodrow Wilson Center's Global Health Initiative
Posted in Announcements, Meetings, Policy | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 12th, 2010 by KateMitch
In honor of International Day of the Midwife last week (May 5th) and International Nurses Day (today), Monica Onyango, MHTF Editorial Committee member, reflects on the role of midwives and nurses in Southern Sudan. Monica Onyango is a nurse midwife and holds a PhD in Nursing and an MPH in International Health. She teaches courses on the management of disasters and complex humanitarian emergencies and sexual and reproductive health in disaster settings at Boston University. She has extensive experience working in reproductive health and maternal and child health in Angola, Kenya, and Southern Sudan. Her recent research concerns women’s experiences with abortion complications, post abortion care and male involvement in reproductive health. The MHTF invites you to read her reflection—and learn about the essential role nurses and midwives play in providing care to pregnant women in Southern Sudan.
Situations of complex humanitarian emergencies differ significantly depending on the location and context. Affected populations rely on help from outside the community because most often they cannot cope with the prevailing circumstances. Midwives are among the health professionals who provide care early during a humanitarian emergency and stay on for the long term. Women and children become significantly at risk of various reproductive morbidities during crises and are of greatest concern to midwives.
Although the midwifery week has past, I would like to bring attention to the midwives’ role in the provision of maternal and neonatal health in South Sudan, a region recovering from 21 years of civil war between the North and South which ended in 2005. The war left South Sudan with some of the worst health indicators and acute shortage of experienced technical personnel. The maternal mortality ratio is estimated at 2,040/100,000 live births, currently one of the highest in the world.
I have worked in South Sudan as a nurse midwife on and off since 1992. Some of my best and worst experiences have been in this region. Obviously, my best experiences have been conducting deliveries and having a live healthy baby and a healthy mother as outcomes. The worst have included receiving a woman with an obstructed labor who dies shortly after admission because she did not arrive at the health facility on time; or she arrived on time and there were no resources and/or expertise to deal with her situation. Other cultural factors such as polygamy and early marriages of girls in this part of Sudan also tend to marginalize women and negatively affect reproductive outcomes.
The nurse midwifery profession in South Sudan is in its nascent stages. During the war we trained traditional birth attendants (TBAs) to play a significant role in the provision of maternal and neonatal services at all levels of the health care system. As TBAs are being phased out, there is a 18 month midwifery certificate training at five schools. Additionally, since 2007, the Ministry of Health and United Nations Population Fund coordinate a one month training of different cadres of health professionals on Emergency Obstetric & Neonatal Care. These training are supposed to fill the void and bring skilled care closer to the women and newborns. However, these are still just stop-gaps and the numbers of professional midwives able to provide the required basic emergency obstetric care is extremely limited.
It is encouraging that the Government of South Sudan has acknowledged that investing in professional midwives is fundamental to improving maternal and neonatal health and reducing the high morbidity and mortality levels. The present situation in South Sudan arguably is in need of skilled workers in all sectors of the health system. However, during this restructuring period, establishment of the nurse midwifery professional bodies and associations should be accelerated. Nurse midwives play an important role in women’s access to reproductive and maternal health services all over the world especially at the periphery of the health care system where there are no doctors. Midwives are more so needed in South Sudan where over 90 percent of the population lives in rural areas. To this end, the global nursing community through the international council of nurses also has a duty in the development of the nursing profession in South Sudan. After all the nursing philosophy of caring for individuals, families and communities in need places us in a better position to be actively involved with populations affected by armed conflict and post conflict situations.
Click here to read Monica Onyango’s full bio.
Tags: abortion, abortion complications, Angola, armed conflict, Boston University, Boston University School of Public Health, BUSPH, civil war, complex humanitarian disasters, conflict settings, cultural factors, disaster settings, early marriage, editorial committee, infant health, International Day of the Midwife, international health, International Nurses Day, Kenya, maternal death, maternal health, Maternal Health Task Force, Maternal Health Task Force Editorial Committee, maternal morbidity, MHTF, midwifery care, midwives, Ministry of Health, Monica Onyango, neonatal health, nurse midwives, nurses, nursing, polygamy, post abortion care, post conflict situations, sexual and reproductive health, skilled care, South Sudan, Southern Sudan, Sudan, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, war
Posted in Commentary, News | 2 Comments »
Monday, April 5th, 2010 by KateMitch

Please join the Centre for Development and Population Activities (CEDPA), the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative and Environmental Change and Security Program, the Maternal Health Task Force (MHTF), and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) for the fourth event of the series on Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health.
Family Planning in Fragile States: Overcoming Cultural and Financial Barriers
The event will feature:
Nabila Zar Malick, Director, Rahnuma Family Planning Association of Pakistan
Karima Tunau, OB/GYN, Usmanu Danpodiyo Hospital
Grace Kodindo, Assistant Professor of Population and Family Health, Columbia University
Sandra Krause, Reproductive Health Program Director, Women’s Refugee Commission
April 29, 2010
3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
6th Floor Flom Auditorium
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Please RSVP to globalhealth@wilsoncenter.org with your name and affiliation.
Countries threatened by conflict rank lowest on maternal and newborn health indicators and have fewer resources for reproductive health services such as family planning and emergency obstetric care. Improving access to sexual and reproductive health services in fragile states may challenge cultural beliefs and gender relations within a country. Program managers, policymakers, and donors can mitigate these tensions through culturally sensitive approaches and increased female participation during peacebuilding efforts.
Nabila Zar Malick, director, Rahnuma Family Planning Association of Pakistan, Karima Tunau, OB/GYN, Usmanu Danpodiyo Hospital in Nigeria, and Grace Kodindo, Chadian OB/GYN and assistant professor of population and family health, at Columbia University will discuss their experiences implementing family planning services in Pakistan, Nigeria, and Chad and address the cultural and financial barriers they overcame to increase investments for maternal and reproductive health in their countries. Sandra Krause, reproductive health program director, Women’s Refugee Commission, will offer recommendations on how policymakers can improve access to reproductive health services for women in fragile settings.
About the Maternal Health Policy Series
The reproductive and maternal health community finds itself at a critical point, drawing increased attention and funding, but still confronting more than a half million deaths each year and a high unmet need for family planning. The Policy Dialogue series seeks to galvanize the community by focusing on important–and in some cases controversial–issue within the maternal health community.
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), 6th Floor Flom Auditorium. A map to the Center is available here.
Note: Photo identification is required to enter the building. Please allow additional time to pass through security.
For information on previous and future events in this series, click here.
Tags: Advancing, CEDPA, Centre for Development and Population Activities, Columbia University, conflict, conflict settings, disaster settings, family planning, Family Planning in Fragile States: Overcoming Cultural and Financial Barriers, fourth event, Grace Kodindo, Karima Tunau, maternal health, Maternal Health Task Force, MHTF, Nabila Zar Malick, Population and Family Health, Rahnuma Family Planning Association of Pakistan, reproductive health, reproductive health in conflict settings, Sandra Krause, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, unmet need, USAID, Usmanu Danpodiyo Hospital, Wilson Center, Women's Refugee Commission, Woodrow Wilson Center's Global Health Initiative, Woodrow Wison International Center for Scholars
Posted in Announcements, Meetings, News, Opportunities, Policy | No Comments »
Monday, February 22nd, 2010 by KateMitch
Maternal and Newborn Health as a Priority for Strengthening Health Systems
Please join the Woodrow Wilson Center’s Global Health Initiative, Maternal Health Task Force (MHTF), and United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) for the third event of the series on Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health.
The event will feature presentations and discussion with Julio Frenk, Dean of the Harvard University School of Public Health; Helen de Pinho, Assistant Professor of Clinical Population and Family Health at Columbia University; and Agnes Soucat, Senior Health Economist & Lead Advisor for Health, Nutrition and Population with the World Bank.
March 8, 2010
3:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
6th Floor Flom Auditorium
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Please RSVP to globalhealth@wilsoncenter.org with your name and affiliation.
Interested but can’t attend?
Tune into the live or archived webcast here. The webcast will begin approximately 10 minutes after the posted meeting time.
About this event
Increasing investments for strengthening health systems requires improved donor coordination and additional research to help guide decisions about where investments will have the greatest return. The inclusion of key maternal health indicators such as access to emergency obstetric care is an important strategy to improving health systems and encourages the implementation of priority evidence-based interventions.
About the Maternal Health Policy Series
The reproductive and maternal health community finds itself at a critical point, drawing increased attention and funding, but still confronting more than a half million deaths each year and a high unmet need for family planning. The Policy Dialogue series seeks to galvanize the community by focusing on important–and in some cases controversial–issues within the maternal health community.
Click here to download the PDF announcement with more details about the event and the speakers.
Click here to view archived webcasts of the previous two events in this series.
Tags: Advancing Policy Dialogue on Maternal Health, Agnes Soucat, Columbia University, Harvard University School of Public Health, Helen de Pinho, Julio Frenk, Maternal Health Task Force, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, webcast, Woodrow Wilson Center, Woodrow Wilson Center's Global Health Initiative, World Bank
Posted in Meetings, News, Opportunities, Policy | No Comments »
The Role of Midwives During Disasters and Complex Humanitarian Emergencies: Making a Case for South Sudan
Wednesday, May 12th, 2010 by KateMitchIn honor of International Day of the Midwife last week (May 5th) and International Nurses Day (today), Monica Onyango, MHTF Editorial Committee member, reflects on the role of midwives and nurses in Southern Sudan. Monica Onyango is a nurse midwife and holds a PhD in Nursing and an MPH in International Health. She teaches courses on the management of disasters and complex humanitarian emergencies and sexual and reproductive health in disaster settings at Boston University. She has extensive experience working in reproductive health and maternal and child health in Angola, Kenya, and Southern Sudan. Her recent research concerns women’s experiences with abortion complications, post abortion care and male involvement in reproductive health. The MHTF invites you to read her reflection—and learn about the essential role nurses and midwives play in providing care to pregnant women in Southern Sudan.
Situations of complex humanitarian emergencies differ significantly depending on the location and context. Affected populations rely on help from outside the community because most often they cannot cope with the prevailing circumstances. Midwives are among the health professionals who provide care early during a humanitarian emergency and stay on for the long term. Women and children become significantly at risk of various reproductive morbidities during crises and are of greatest concern to midwives.
Although the midwifery week has past, I would like to bring attention to the midwives’ role in the provision of maternal and neonatal health in South Sudan, a region recovering from 21 years of civil war between the North and South which ended in 2005. The war left South Sudan with some of the worst health indicators and acute shortage of experienced technical personnel. The maternal mortality ratio is estimated at 2,040/100,000 live births, currently one of the highest in the world.
I have worked in South Sudan as a nurse midwife on and off since 1992. Some of my best and worst experiences have been in this region. Obviously, my best experiences have been conducting deliveries and having a live healthy baby and a healthy mother as outcomes. The worst have included receiving a woman with an obstructed labor who dies shortly after admission because she did not arrive at the health facility on time; or she arrived on time and there were no resources and/or expertise to deal with her situation. Other cultural factors such as polygamy and early marriages of girls in this part of Sudan also tend to marginalize women and negatively affect reproductive outcomes.
The nurse midwifery profession in South Sudan is in its nascent stages. During the war we trained traditional birth attendants (TBAs) to play a significant role in the provision of maternal and neonatal services at all levels of the health care system. As TBAs are being phased out, there is a 18 month midwifery certificate training at five schools. Additionally, since 2007, the Ministry of Health and United Nations Population Fund coordinate a one month training of different cadres of health professionals on Emergency Obstetric & Neonatal Care. These training are supposed to fill the void and bring skilled care closer to the women and newborns. However, these are still just stop-gaps and the numbers of professional midwives able to provide the required basic emergency obstetric care is extremely limited.
It is encouraging that the Government of South Sudan has acknowledged that investing in professional midwives is fundamental to improving maternal and neonatal health and reducing the high morbidity and mortality levels. The present situation in South Sudan arguably is in need of skilled workers in all sectors of the health system. However, during this restructuring period, establishment of the nurse midwifery professional bodies and associations should be accelerated. Nurse midwives play an important role in women’s access to reproductive and maternal health services all over the world especially at the periphery of the health care system where there are no doctors. Midwives are more so needed in South Sudan where over 90 percent of the population lives in rural areas. To this end, the global nursing community through the international council of nurses also has a duty in the development of the nursing profession in South Sudan. After all the nursing philosophy of caring for individuals, families and communities in need places us in a better position to be actively involved with populations affected by armed conflict and post conflict situations.
Click here to read Monica Onyango’s full bio.
[Translate]
Tags: abortion, abortion complications, Angola, armed conflict, Boston University, Boston University School of Public Health, BUSPH, civil war, complex humanitarian disasters, conflict settings, cultural factors, disaster settings, early marriage, editorial committee, infant health, International Day of the Midwife, international health, International Nurses Day, Kenya, maternal death, maternal health, Maternal Health Task Force, Maternal Health Task Force Editorial Committee, maternal morbidity, MHTF, midwifery care, midwives, Ministry of Health, Monica Onyango, neonatal health, nurse midwives, nurses, nursing, polygamy, post abortion care, post conflict situations, sexual and reproductive health, skilled care, South Sudan, Southern Sudan, Sudan, UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, war
Posted in Commentary, News | 2 Comments »