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Based on the paper by Kirrin Gill, Rohini Pande, and Anju Malhotra International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) Women Deliver for Development Photo.

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Presentation on theme: "Based on the paper by Kirrin Gill, Rohini Pande, and Anju Malhotra International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) Women Deliver for Development Photo."— Presentation transcript:

1 Based on the paper by Kirrin Gill, Rohini Pande, and Anju Malhotra International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) Women Deliver for Development Photo credit: USAID/L. Lartigue

2 Four Key Issues 1)State of maternal health in the developing world needs urgent attention 2)Maternal health is critical to development worldwide 3)Promoting maternal health is a matter of human rights 4)Preventing maternal death and disability in developing countries is feasible

3 Women Deliver as Mothers: Women Deliver as Mothers: State of Maternal Health ●Unsatisfactory progress ●Large regional differences ●Large number of deaths within the first month of life ●Delivery and postpartum care remain poor

4 Gwatkin et al., 2000 Poorest women in poorest regions have least access to skilled care during childbirth Inequities in Maternal Care

5 Mothers Individuals Family Members Citizens WOMEN AS… Conceptual Framework

6 Maternal Health and Development Maternal health: ●Improves when women are empowered ●Is intricately linked to reproductive health ●Has profound effects on children and families Poor maternal health is: ●Costly for families and countries ●Significant proportion of global burden of disease

7 Women Deliver as Individuals: Links with Women’s Human Rights and Empowerment ●Strongly linked to better maternal health  Education  Economic opportunities  Household decision making  Intimate partner violence

8 Women Deliver as Individuals: Links with Reproductive Health ●Contraceptive use  Improves maternal health ●Unsafe abortion  Major cause of maternal mortality, morbidity  13% of maternal deaths worldwide ●HIV and AIDS  Leading cause of maternal death in Africa

9 Women Deliver as Family Members: Effects on Children and Families ●Health and survival  Children less likely to survive, especially girls  Surviving children less likely to be healthy and educated ● Economic and social costs  Families lose up to 1/3 of income in treatment costs  Families lose mother’s income and non-paid work

10 Women Deliver as Citizens: Effects on National Health and Productivity ● Significant burden of disease  Leading cause of death and disability for adult women  13% of deaths and of healthy life-years ●Lost productivity  More than US$15 billion per year

11 Investing in Maternal Health: Potential and Shortfalls ●Gap between actual and needed investment  $1.2 billion spent in 2006  $5 billion per year is needed until 2010 ● Gap can be closed  Only 0.016% of global GNP; 2% of global aid  Interventions highly cost-effective  Success stories abound even in poorer countries

12 Conclusions ●Maternal health, gender, and development are linked ●Shortfall in resources and lack of progress are disturbing ●Financial investment and political commitment can save the lives of women and children

13 Invest in women to fulfill their potential to deliver as mothers, individuals, family members, and citizens


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