CleanBirth.org’s mission is to make birth safer by providing education and supplies. Even still it’s easy to forget sometimes how effective and simple something like a cord clamp or tie can be in preventing needless deaths.
I just got a reminder reading this article in www.globalpost.com. Here’s an excerpt of the story from a birth in India that went well, followed by unhygienic practices that cost a baby his life:
Chunnu Bai was lucky; it was a normal delivery. She picked up the baby and cleaned him with her sari, placing him on the rice tray in her house.
About half an hour later the village dai, a traditional (untrained) birth attendant, came to her aid. She cut the umbilical cord with a clean blade, and tied it with a thread from the house. Then she applied some oil to the stump of the cord.
The first couple of days, the child was fine and feeding well. On the third day, Chunnu Bai noticed that he stopped sucking, and his body went into a spasm. Horrified, she called for help and took him to the hospital. But the baby had developed tetanus, which in most cases ends up being fatal. The second day at the hospital, despite intensive treatment, they could not save the child…
Globally, of the three million newborns that die every year within a month of birth, more than a million babies die on the first day. The majority of these deaths result from complications related to preterm birth or arising during delivery — especially from unsafe home births.
Help CleanBirth.org prevent tetanus in infants in southern Laos. Donate today. $5 Saves 2 Lives.
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