
"I am going to the sea to fetch a new baby, but the journey is long
and dangerous, and I may not return."
Commitment counts
We know what to do to reduce maternal mortality. The necessary services include family
planning, basic maternal care, skilled birth attendants, neonatal care and preventing and
treating unsafe abortions and the complications of pregnancy and delivery. And we know the
costabout $3 a person a year in low-income countries. Despite their low incomes,
China, Cuba and Sri Lanka have all reduced maternal deaths through efforts to improve
access to primary health care, strengthen health systems and improve the quality of health
care. |
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Ninety-nine
percent of maternal deaths occur in developing countries, most of them preventable.
Infections, blood loss and unsafe abortion account for the majority of deaths. To reduce
maternal mortality, more investment in health systems is needed to improve the quality and
coverage of delivery services and to provide prenatal and postnatal care for the poor. Maternal
deaths are hard to measure. The proportion of births attended by skilled personnel helps
to track progress in reducing maternal mortality. In regions where skilled attendants are
not routinely available, the goal is to have skilled attendants at 90% of births by 2015.


Maternal mortality varies widely in the world's regionslow in Latin America, but
very high in Africa. In many poor African countries, one mother dies from complications of
pregnancy and delivery for every 100 live births.

Health workers with midwifery skills are the key to reducing maternal mortality. As
well as attending births, they provide mothers with basic information about prenatal and
postnatal care for themselves and their children. Improving women's social status and
ensuring gender equity in health care are important in achieving this goal.
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