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NEPAL: FOCUS ON MATERNAL MORTALITY
March 29, 2005 (IRIN) - Dinanath, a Nepalese farmer,
was struck by tragedy when he lost his wife following the birth
of their child a few months ago.
She survived prolonged labour and the eventual delivery of their
baby in their home village of Karma, 200 km south west of the
Nepalese capital, Kathmandu. There was no trained midwife in attendance
to assist the 35-year-old woman.
When she started bleeding following the delivery, Dinanath tried
to get her to the nearest health centre at Bahadurganj, about 8
km from his village. As buses rarely travel through the area, the
ox-cart is the only means of transport and the journey takes more
than two hours.
Dinanath was desperate to save his wife and drove the ox as hard
as he could in his attempt to get medical help for his wife. His
efforts were in vain and she died on the journey.
In the village of Sisuwa, only a few kilometres from Karma, another
poor farmer, Radhe, lost his 18-year-old wife in the same way.
This is the harsh reality of childbirth for many women in the district,
who die from complications because of the lack of health care personnel
or medical centres, according to NGO and government health workers.
The nearest hospitals staffed with trained midwives are up to 70
km from their villages. They either have to travel all the way to
Butwal, the main city in southwest Nepal, or cross the border to
neighbouring India. The nearest Indian hospital is in Siddharthanagar,
at least 40 km away.
The roads are beset with frequent politically-motivated strikes
and numerous roadblocks manned by Maoist insurgents, who have been
waging a nine year campaign in Nepal. Many women make agonising
journeys over long distances seeking help. There have been several
reported incidents of pregnant women dying on the road because transport
problems have preventing them from reaching hospital in time.
"The conflict has added more pressure to the maternal related
problems," Aruna Upreti, a reproductive health worker, told
IRIN.
The actions of Maoist rebels have escalated in recent years and
in response the government has imposed curfews in many areas. Transport
has been hit with restrictions on the movement of vehicles after
dark and even travel on dirt roads between villages. Trenches have
been dug across roads on several routes to prevent the movement
of vehicles. Ambushes on the main east-west highway have also deterred
buses from travel mounting a regular service and in these areas
cases of pre and post-natal mortality are reported to have been
high.
Despite these problems, health workers agree that the difficulties
created by conflict are insignificant when compared with the impact
of such issues as poor medical facilities, practices that endanger
the health of pregnant women and simple government negligence.
THE SCALE OF THE PROBLEM
According to Ministry of Health estimates, pregnancy-related complications
kill over 4,500 women every year in Nepal. Most of the deaths occur
in rural areas, where access to health services and health personnel
is severely limited.
Women constitute slightly more than half of the country's total
population of 25.7 million.
A 1997 government report estimated the maternal mortality ratio
to be 530 per 100,000 births. The Human Development Report for 2004
by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) estimates the
figure to be substantially higher at 740 per 100,000 births. A third
report by the Population Reference Bureau, a US-based NGO, places
the figure even higher still at 830 per 100,000 births.
Whatever the actual number, the reality for pregnant women in Nepal
is extremely bleak. Health experts blame three main factors for
the terrible mortality rate, referring to them as "the three
D"s.? They list them as delay in taking the decision to seek
medical assistance, delay in accessing the appropriate care and
the delay of care at health centres.
Around 900,000 pregnancies are expected this year and statistics
indicate just under 129,000 will develop life-threatening complications,
according to data supplied by the national Support for Safe Motherhood
Programme (SSMP) run by the government and funded by the UK Department
for International Development (DFID).
"I don't see maternity mortality as a public health indicator
but more as a human rights and gender discrimination issue,"
Indira Shrestha from the SSMP, told IRIN in Kathmandu.
HOME BIRTHS
Successive governments in recent years have each failed to invest
in health facilities in rural areas, according to experts. Because
of this more than 89 per cent of births take place at home with
the assistance of relatives, friends and untrained midwives, according
to official statistics. Only eleven per cent are attended by properly
trained medical staff.
"It is not that Nepal does not have trained health professionals.
It does. The trouble is that they tend to be clustered in Kathmandu
and other major cities,? Dr Geetha Rana, a safe motherhood expert
from the United Nations Children?s Fund (UNICEF) in Nepal, told
IRIN. UNICEF works closely with district public health offices to
improve the quality of care and treatment.
In the absence of trained midwives, many women suffer from prolonged
labour and complications caused by a retained placenta. According
to statistics, a large number of them die from subsequent bleeding
or ?post-partum haemorrhage? amounting to about 46 percent of maternal
deaths.
"Post-partum is the most dangerous period. The treatment should
be taken immediately when the bleeding starts," Swaraj Pradhan
Rajbhandari from Nepal's Family Health Programme of United States
Agency for International Development (USAID), told IRIN.
Even small district hospitals have such medication available but
the treatment must begin within two hours to be effective.
REASONS FOR DELAYS
The problems arise when family members in rural areas don?t take
immediate action to get the woman to hospital, according to some
health experts. The low value of the daughter-in-law in Nepalese
culture and cash problems lead to the delay.
"She will be rushed to the hospital in the
last hour. By that time, it will be too late to save her,"
Rajbhandari added.
According to one recent report from the eastern Morang district,
a woman in her fifth pregnancy and under medical supervision, suffered
from internal bleeding after her uterus burst. Family members refused
to donate blood when asked by the doctor.
"If she dies then that is her fate," the family members,
including her husband, told the doctor.
"I will feel weak if I give her my blood," said the husband.
In less than an hour, she was dead.
"This is an example of how low women are valued and how they
are so grossly discriminated [against]," health worker Upreti
explained. She has travelled extensively in the most remote areas
to treat pregnant women.
She did not die due to a lack of doctors or medicines, said Upreti.
EFFORTS TO REDUCE THE PROBLEM
Although the global initiative to reduce maternal mortality and
promote safe motherhood practices started in the mid 1980s, Nepal
was slow to start any national initiative despite having one of
the highest death rates. It was only after the Cairo conference
on population and development that Nepal finally launched the national
safe motherhood plan of action.
International pressure following the national health survey of 1996
pushed the government of Nepal into initiating a programme of action.
Nepal has a long way to go to achieve the Millennium Development
Goal of achieving a 90 per cent attendance at birth by trained personnel
and reducing the maternity mortality ratio to 200 per 100,000 births
by 2015.
What we need most is raising awareness in the rural areas to practice
safe motherhood. This is possible even in a conflict situation,
Ava Darsan Shrestha from Samanta, the secretariat of Safe Motherhood
Network run by a consortium of NGOs working in 10 remote districts
of Nepal, told IRIN.
Samanta organised a health camp on prolapse of the uterus from November
2004 to February 2005 when about 5,500 women and girls were given
free treatment.
The camp showed us that women are willing to travel any distance
if services are available. When it comes to reproductive health,
they will not hold back even if it means travelling to conflict
zones, Pinky Singh Rana from the network told IRIN.
The Family Health Division is beginning to replicate the Sri Lankan
model by initially training professional health workers in the skills
needed. It plans to focus on the establishment of numerous birthing
centres staffed by 6,000 midwives both in the rural countryside
and in Nepal's mountains and hills.
Before 1999, front-line maternal health care providers were known
as ?maternal child health workers? (MCHWs) of which there were over
3,000 in all. However, they are not now recognised as skilled health
workers.
In 1999, the government introduced a policy to upgrade MCHWs to
Auxiliary Nurse Midwives (ANMs). But half of them weren?t eligible
for further training as most of them hadn?t finished school. According
to SSMP, over 700 trained midwives are needed in 16 mountain districts.
"The government does not have to bear all the financial and
logistical responsibilities. The community can deploy and the government
can sponsor education," Shrestha from SSMP said.
"This is perhaps our only hope and the most practical solution,"
she added.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=46346&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=NEPAL
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