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JOINT STATEMENT ON
MATERNAL AND NEWBORN HEALTH
Accelerating
Efforts to Save the Lives of Women and Newborns
Every minute a woman
dies in pregnancy or childbirth, over 500,000 every year.
And every year over one million newborns die within their
first 24 hours of life for lack of quality care. Maternal
mortality is the largest health inequity in the world; 99
per cent of maternal deaths occur in developing countries –
half of them in Africa. A woman in Afghanistan faces a 1 in
8 chance during her lifetime of dying of pregnancy–related
causes, while a woman in Sweden has 1 chance in 17,400.
On
25 September 2008,
as world
leaders gather for the High-Level Event on the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF and the World
Bank jointly pledged to intensify their support to countries
to achieve Millennium Development Goal 5 “To Improve
Maternal Health” – the MDG showing the least progress.
During the next five
years, we will enhance support to the countries with the
highest maternal mortality. We will support countries in
strengthening their health systems to achieve the two MDG 5
targets of reducing the maternal mortality ratio by 75 per
cent and achieving universal access to reproductive health
by 2015. Our joint efforts will also contribute to achieving
MDG 4 “To Reduce Child Mortality”.
Fortunately, the vast
majority of maternal and newborn deaths can be prevented
with proven interventions to ensure that every pregnancy is
wanted and every birth is safe.
WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF and
the World Bank will work with governments and civil society
to strengthen national capacity to:
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Conduct needs
assessments and ensure that health plans are MDG–driven
and performance–based;
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Cost national
plans and rapidly mobilize required resources;
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Scale-up quality
health services to ensure universal access to
reproductive health, especially for family planning,
skilled attendance at delivery and emergency obstetric
and newborn care, ensuring linkages with HIV prevention
and treatment;
-
Address the urgent
need for skilled health workers, particularly midwives;
-
Address financial
barriers to access, especially for the poorest;
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Tackle the root
causes of maternal mortality and morbidity, including
gender inequality, low access to education – especially
for girls, child marriage and adolescent pregnancy;
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Strengthen
monitoring and evaluation systems.
For further details visit:
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/statements/2008/s10/en/ |