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This presentation discusses the current state of maternal and newborn health in Africa, including the high rates of maternal and newborn deaths. It highlights the lack of progress towards achieving the MDG 5 goal of reducing maternal mortality and the disparities in coverage of key interventions. The presentation also outlines the way forward, including scaling up effective interventions, strengthening family planning, and empowering women and communities to make timely decisions. It concludes with the role of WHO in advocating for increased funding, policy development, and capacity building.
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Maternal and Newborn Health in the African Region Africa Regional Meeting on Interventions for Impact in Essential Obstetrics and Newborn Care 21-23 February 2011 Addis Ababa Dr P. Mongi
Structure of this Presentation Facts on MNH Coverage of key interventions Way Forward
Maternal Health Situation In Africa • Each year in Africa at least 30 million women become pregnant • Every year 204,000 African mothers die of causes related to pregnancy and childbirth- 3/5 of the global figure • Each year 1.16 million newborn babies are dying in the first month of life • There are strong links between maternal deaths, stillbirths and newborn deaths • Majority of these deaths could be easily prevented
VeryLittle Progress Towards Achieving the MDG 5 Goal of Reducing Maternal Mortality Maternal mortality ratio (per 100,000 live births) 4
2 Countries are on track 20 Countries making progress 13 Countries have insufficient progress 7 Countries have no progress No data/unclassified No AFRO Very Little Progress Towards Achieving the MDG 5 Goal of Reducing Maternal Mortality • MMR in the African Region (2008) : • 620 per 100,000 live births • MDG 5 target :228
75% of maternal deaths are due to direct obstetric complications • Underlying causes • Delay in decision making at home; • Delay in transportation to facility; and • Delay in getting the appropriate treatment at H/Facility Causes of maternal death in the African Region, 2004
Causes of Under five Deaths, WHO/AFRO, 2008 Source: World Health Organization. The Global Burden of Disease: 2004 update. World Health Organization, Geneva, 2008.
Coverage of key MNH Interventions, African Region, 2000-05 and 2006-08 The hours and days of highest risk have lowest coverage Source: WHO-World Health Statistics 2006, 2007 and 2010
Countries and within country level- high inequality in the coverage of interventions • Geographical disparity • rural versus urban • Social/Economic disparity • Rich versus poor, • Education status • Adolescents
Access to Skilled Care at Birth by urban and rural areas(N=34, DHS 2001-2006)
Unmet need for Family Planning (%) Source: WHO-World Health Statistics 2010 No data
Global and Regional Commitments • In 2000 MDGs 4 and 5 • Roadmap adopted by all MOH Ministers of the Africa Region by resolution AF/RC/54/R9 at the 54th session in 2004 • The CARMMA-23 countries launched • WHO/AFRO Strategic Directions 2010-2015 • SD 3 -Putting the health of Mothers and Children first • The UN SG Global Strategy for Women and Children- • AU Head of State Meeting July 2010 in Kampala-commitment on MNCH Despite all efforts and commitment of governments and partners, very few countries have the necessary resources and support to fully implement their MNH Road Maps towards universal access to key interventions
The Challenge • Governance and Leadership • Weak health systems • Human resource crisis. • Inadequate infrastructure, medicines and equipment. • Inadequate funds for universal coverage of interventions. • Inadequate management and use ofhealth information. • Poor Coordination
Way Forward …where they live… …what we must do… we know… …who is at risk… …and how to do it.
Scale up effective interventions Access to skilled attendants at birth, combined with prompt referral in case of complications Scaling up emergency obstetric & newborn care Strengthening Family Planning Reducing pregnancy in adolescents Stronger links between HIV/AIDS and reproductive health Stronger links between malaria and maternal health-can reduce 10% MMR Empowering women, families, and communities to make timely decisions
Key Interventions for newborn survival Many Newborn lives could be saved by use of simple low technological interventions like: • Supporting breastfeeding • Providing adequate warmth • Ensuring good hygiene and cord care • Recognizing early signs of danger & providing prompt treatment • Giving extra care to small babies and • Having skilled health care attendance for mothers and babies at delivery and immediate post-partum period
The higher the proportion of deliveries attended by skilled attendant in a country, the lower the country’s maternal mortality ratio Maternal deaths per 1000000 live births % skilled attendant at delivery
As, WHO what is our role to scale up these high impact interventions Advocacy • For increased domestic and external funding and better utilization of existing funds • For important policy decisions (task shifting, women empowerment ) Policy Strategy &development • Decentralization & reaching vulnerable population • Health care financing & social protection • Integrated MNCH service delivery • Human resource development (skilled birth attendance…) Capacity building • Skilled birth attendance • Emergency Obstetric & Newborn Care
Care for everyone… … and by everyone