| Literature DB >> 21608417 |
Ndola Prata1, Paige Passano, Tami Rowen, Suzanne Bell, Julia Walsh, Malcolm Potts.
Abstract
Recent efforts to reduce maternal mortality in developing countries have focused primarily on two long-term aims: training and deploying skilled birth attendants and upgrading emergency obstetric care facilities. Given the future population-level benefits, strengthening of health systems makes excellent strategic sense but it does not address the immediate safe-delivery needs of the estimated 45 million women who are likely to deliver at home, without a skilled birth attendant. There are currently 28 countries from four major regions in which fewer than half of all births are attended by skilled birth attendants. Sixty-nine percent of maternal deaths in these four regions can be attributed to these 28 countries, despite the fact that these countries only constitute 34% of the total population in these regions. Trends documenting the change in the proportion of births accompanied by a skilled attendant in these 28 countries over the last 15-20 years offer no indication that adequate change is imminent. To rapidly reduce maternal mortality in regions where births in the home without skilled birth attendants are common, governments and community-based organizations could implement a cost-effective, complementary strategy involving health workers who are likely to be present when births in the home take place. Training community-based birth attendants in primary and secondary prevention technologies (e.g. misoprostol, family planning, measurement of blood loss, and postpartum care) will increase the chance that women in the lowest economic quintiles will also benefit from global safe motherhood efforts.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21608417 PMCID: PMC3126980 DOI: 10.3329/jhpn.v29i2.7812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Popul Nutr ISSN: 1606-0997 Impact factor: 2.000
Countries where less than 50% of births are attended by skilled birth attendants
| UNFPA region | Countries |
|---|---|
| Sub-Saharan Africa | Burundi, Chad, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia |
| Asia and the Pacific | Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Laos, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, and Timor-Leste |
| Arab States (Middle East and North Africa) | Yemen |
| Latin America and Caribbean | Guatemala and Haiti |
Source: Measure DHS 2010 (9).
UNFPA=United Nations Population Fund
Impact of specific countries on regional maternal mortality rates
| UNFPA region | Regional MMR | No. of maternal deathsper region | No. of maternal deaths | % of maternal deaths | % of regional population | No. of countries with less than 50% SBA attendance† |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 630 | 189,000 | 130,070 | 69 | 56 | 16 |
| Asia and the Pacific | 200 | 136,000 | 112,570 | 83 | 68 | 9 |
| Arab States (Middle East and North Africa) | 250 | 21,000 | 1,800 | 9 | 9 | 1 |
| Latin America and Caribbean | 85 | 9,200 | 1,300 | 14 | 4 | 2 |
| Total | 1,165 | 355,200 | 245,740 | 69 | 34 | 28 |
Sources:
*World Health Organization 2010 (1)
†Measure DHS 2010 (9)
‡Population Reference Bureau 2010 (13).
MMR=Maternal mortality ratio;
SBA=Skilled birth attendant;
UNFPA=United Nations Population Fund
Fig. 1.Trends in coverage of skilled birth attendants between 1987 and 2008
Fig. 2.Percentage of births accompanied by skilled attendants among countries lacking reliable DHS trend data
Challenge of fertility and population growth in SBA deployment
| Country | TFR (2007) | Total population (million) (mid-2010) | Maternal mortality ratio | Density of nursing and midwifery personnel, per 10,000 population (data 2000-2009) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Niger | 7.2 | 15.9 | 820 | 1 |
| Guinea-Bissau | 7.1 | 1.6 | 1,000 | 6 |
| Afghanistan | 7.1 | 29.1 | 1,400 | 5 |
| Burundi | 6.8 | 8.5 | 970 | 2 |
| Timor-Leste | 6.6 | 1.2 | 370 | 22 |
| Uganda | 6.5 | 33.8 | 430 | 13 |
| Mali | 6.5 | 15.2 | 830 | 2 |
| Sierra Leone | 6.5 | 5.8 | 970 | 2 |
| Chad | 6.2 | 11.5 | 1,200 | 3 |
| Somalia | 6.1 | 9.4 | 1,200 | 1 |
| Yemen | 5.5 | 23.6 | 210 | 7 |
| Guinea | 5.5 | 10.8 | 680 | <0.5 |
| Nigeria | 5.4 | 158.3 | 840 | 16 |
| Ethiopia | 5.3 | 85.0 | 470 | 2 |
| Zambia | 5.2 | 13.3 | 470 | 7 |
| Mozambique | 5.2 | 23.4 | 550 | 3 |
| Tanzania | 5.2 | 45.0 | 790 | 2 |
| Eritrea | 5.1 | 5.2 | 280 | 6 |
| Kenya | 5.0 | 40.0 | 530 | 12 |
| Guatemala | 4.2 | 14.4 | 110 | N/A |
| Papua New Guinea | 3.8 | 6.8 | 250 | 5 |
| Haiti | 3.6 | 9.8 | 300 | N/A |
| Pakistan | 3.5 | 184.8 | 260 | 4 |
| Nepal | 3.3 | 28.0 | 380 | 5 |
| Lao PDR | 3.2 | 6.4 | 580 | 10 |
| Cambodia | 3.2 | 15.1 | 290 | 8 |
| Bangladesh | 2.9 | 164.4 | 340 | 3 |
| India | 2.8 | 1,188.8 | 230 | 13 |
Sources:
*State of the world's children 2009 (54);
†Population Reference Bureau 2010 (13);
‡World Health Organization 2010 (1);
¶World health statistics 2010 (18);
N/A=Data not available;
TFR=Total fertility rate