Search This Blog
Following are links to various U.S. government press releases.
Counterterrorism
White-Collar Crime
Popular Posts
-
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Contracts Defense Logistics Agency Certified Stainless Service doing business as West-Mark*...
-
Remarks at the Silica Final Rule Announcement, International Masonry Institute Training Center, Bowie, MD, March 24, 2016 - United States De...
-
Science Papers Reveal New Aspects of Pluto and its Moons : A year ago, Pluto was just a bright speck in the cameras of NASA’s approaching Ne...
-
FROM: AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE Future Joint Force Must Be Balanced, General Says By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr....
-
FROM: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT Status of the Processing of the Camp Ashraf Residents Testimony Ambassador Daniel Fried, Special Advisor on A...
Sunday, June 3, 2012
SAVING MOTHERS
FROM: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT
The U.S. Response to Global Maternal Mortality: Saving Mothers, Giving Life
Fact Sheet
Bureau of Public Affairs
May 30, 2012
“Every woman, whoever she is, wherever she lives, should be able to give birth without the fear she’s going to lose her baby or that her baby will lose her mother.”
– Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
Maternal Mortality
According to World Health Organization statistics, every day approximately 800 women die giving life, and many more suffer serious complications from pregnancy, labor, and delivery, which can result in long-term disabilities. Maternal mortality reflects global disparities, with 99 percent of all maternal deaths occurring in developing countries.
Maternal deaths, most of which are preventable, happen around labor, delivery and the immediate postpartum period. HIV/AIDS is increasingly a common cause of pregnancy-associated deaths in Africa.
Despite global progress to reduce maternal mortality, Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 5, which calls for a 75 percent reduction in the maternal mortality ratio by 2015, lags furthest behind all eight MDGs. Research shows that mothers’ lives cannot be saved by any one intervention alone. Dramatically reducing maternal mortality will require a comprehensive approach, significant resources and expertise.
U.S. Government Response to Maternal Mortality
The U.S. Government has been a leader in supporting and encouraging countries to implement a full range of strategies to reduce maternal death, including:
Increasing access to a range of contraceptive methods at the community level, integrating family planning with other health services
Implementing integrated programming in family planning, and maternal and child health
Convening summits on critical maternal health issues
Driving innovations through the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Saving Lives at Birth Program
Implementing Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission and treatment for mothers infected with HIV
Establishing the Global Public/Private Partnership for Saving Mothers, Giving Life which focuses on strengthening district health systems in the areas of labor, delivery, and the 24 hours postpartum period
Saving Mothers, Giving Life: A Global Partnership
Saving Mothers is a partnership of key government and private sector players in the global health field to reduce maternal mortality. The global partnership seeks to bring together partners’ strengths, experience, methodologies, and resources to address strategic gaps in maternal care. Founding partners include the U.S. Global Health Initiative; the Government of Norway; Merck, through its initiative Merck for Mothers; the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; and Every Mother Counts. The partnership is also actively seeking new partners.
The Partnership’s Work
Saving Mothers, Giving Life was established to aggressively reduce maternal mortality in countries where women are dying at alarming rates during pregnancy and childbirth. It began in Uganda and Zambia. The effort helps mothers during labor, delivery, and the first 24 hours postpartum – the period when two out of every three maternal deaths and 45 percent of newborn deaths occur.
Aiming to reduce maternal deaths by up to 50 percent in target districts, the program works to:
Develop models of quality maternal health services by strengthening district health networks
Galvanize the American public to create a domestic constituency to support saving mothers’ lives around the world
Engage new public and private partners around the world to co-invest in saving mothers.