Great talk. I highly recommend that you watch this talk about one Nigerian woman’s work to save the lives of mothers and babies. Watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CATk4oaZdOQ&feature=youtu.be
Helping Babies Breathe Initiative
The more I learn about clean birth kits and their usage, the more I understand how trained attendants are critical to the survival of moms and babies.
One amazing program that I have learned of is Helping Babies Breath. This program trains midwifes, doctors, nurses, and “in certain circumstances” traditional birth attendants in neonatal resuscitation. Here’s more:
The CurriculumHelping Babies Breathe is a neonatal resuscitation curriculum for resource-limited circumstances. It was developed on the premise that assessment at birth and simple newborn care are things that every baby deserves. The initial steps taught in HBB can save lives and give a much better start to many babies who struggle to breathe at birth. The focus is to meet the needs of every baby born.
The Golden Minute®Helping Babies Breathe emphasizes skilled attendance at birth, assessment of every baby, temperature support, stimulation to breathe, and assisted ventilation as needed, all within “The Golden Minute” after birth.
This article from USAID on The Golden Minute® is also worth a read.
To reach five years, though, a child must take his or her first breath of life in the first minute following birth. The World Health Organization estimates approximately one million babies die each year from birth asphyxia, a condition in which babies who do not breathe on their own immediately following delivery.
Let’s not export our flawed social views on Maternal Health
Today I had a conversation with a friend who is in her 50s about breastfeeding her four children, who were born over approximately a 15 year period. She said with her first, she didn’t breastfeed at all. With her second, she breastfed for a month. And with her third and fourth, born 22 months apart, she breastfed each for a year — and was sad to stop.
What made the difference with her last two? She said that noone breastfed when she had her first, there was no support. By the time the last two came, breastfeeding was acceptable if not embraced. Breastfeeding in the US is increasingly embraced but breast milk substitutes are still being given to almost half of US babies by day 7, according to the CDC.
Thinking about this conversation about social context, it is clear that society drives what is acceptable/good when it comes to breastfeeding and birth.
In the US C-sections (often scheduled) are de rigeur among celebrities, thus they are regarded by US Weekly fans everywhere as a preferred choice. The role of midwives is misunderstood, thus they are not sought out. Birth is seen as dangerous and excruciating and voices opposing this media-driven view are drowned out. Breast milk and formula are both regarded by many as equally nutritious, with formula having advantages like “baby is more full and sleeps better.”
One of my fears is that our views of maternal health will be exported to the developing world. It has already begun in the areas of c-section and breastfeeding.
C-section rates in the developing world are on the rise. One study by Belizan et al comments:
Although the epidemic of caesarean section in Latin America is not new,6 little action is taking place to reduce its use. This is partly because caesarean section is now culturally accepted as a normal way of giving birth.23
Breast milk substitutes are being pushed on populations with neither the money nor the clean water nor the need for them. Laos is one example where the population has historically had high levels of breastfeeding, but influxes of breast milk substitutes are changing the situation. This 2010 study by Barennes et al finds:
In Laos, mothers with the highest socio-economic status are showing a tendency to give up breastfeeding. Successful educational strategies and advocacy measures should be urgently developed to promote and sustain breastfeeding in developing countries.
Women in the third world need many things: among them community health workers, midwives, medicine, emergency care and supplies. However, importing our flawed views of breastfeeding and birthing will not save lives. Instead, practical solutions need to be found on the ground, where C-sections and milk substitutes are reserved for medically necessary conditions.
Save the Children in Laos
Save the Children’s Laos Health Program has had great success in the area of the country that they have been serving for 20 years. They have seen an 80% drop in maternal and infant mortality compared with the whole of Laos. But by their own admission there is a long way to go:
The health situation of women and children in Laos is amongst the poorest in Southeast Asia; Infant mortality rate is 70 per 1000 live births and under five mortality claims 98 per 1000 live births1. Every day 36 children under-five die due to preventable and treatable diseases. Percentages of underweight children have been almost unchanged between 1990 and 2006 (40% and 37.1%) and the prevalence of stunting in under-fives is up to 40.4%. According to UNICEF/WHO official estimate (2007), immunisation coverage has declined—only 27% of children by their first birthday have received all eight recommended vaccinations2. Maternal mortality remains very high at 405/100,000 live births, approximately 800 deaths per year or 2 deaths per day. A high percentage of children (71.5%) are born to mothers who received no antenatal care and 84.8% of pregnant women give birth at home3 . These are clear indicators of low health service utilization and poor quality health services/facilities.
5 Innovations to Save Moms
I am excited about this article, “Five Maternal Health Innovations That Could Save Lives on the PBS Newshour site. Check it out for full details of each project. I love, love, love seeing these innovative, simple solutions.
Here is the list of 5 and short descritptions:
1. Preventing low birth weight with chewing gum
Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas
…Some chewing gums contain sugar alcohols, called polyols, that prevent gum disease2…
2. Stopping HIV transmission with a vacuum pack
Duke University from Durham, N.C.
…Duke University developed a foil, polyethylene pouch — much like a fast-food ketchup pouch — that can store medicine for months so that ARVs can be administered as soon as a child is born…
3. Mobile heart monitoring and data gathering
Save the Children Federation from Westport, Conn.
—A mobile fetal heart rate monitor powered by human energy, which won a 2009 Index award, and a mobile phone based data gathering platform will be tested together to improve monitoring…
4. An innovative alternative to forceps
The World Health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland
…The devices is a film-like polyethylene material that looks like an open plastic bag wrapped around the head of the baby, sealed and used to help extraction during complications…
5. Diagnosing with paper stamps
Diagnostics for All, Inc. from Cambridge, Mass.
…Diagnostics for All will create two postage stamp-sized paper tools that can detect anemia and hypoglycemia and hypertensive disorders, all indicators of high-risk pregnancy…
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