WUNRN

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Please see 2 parts of this WUNRN Release on the Need for, and Importance of,

Maternal Mortality Statistics and Analysis Audits in India - to Address and Reduce Maternal Deaths.

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Human Rights Watch

http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/03/24/accounting-life-and-death

 

INDIA - NEED FOR OFFICIAL STATISTICS ON MATERNAL MORTALITY

 

Aruna Kashyap

March 24, 2009

When 20-year-old Ranibai, from a poor family in Uttarakhand, began haemorrhaging during pregnancy, the path to treatment was not easy. Her family carried her on a charpai down hilly terrains to a health facility, but she bled to death before they got there. No health worker was nearby.

Ranibai's case is not an aberration. Tens of thousands of women are known to die of pregnancy and childbirth complications in India every year, but the actual number remains a mystery. For every woman who dies, another 20 to 30 suffer illnesses arising out of delivery or abortions.

An Indian Government estimate says the annual number of maternal deaths (deaths caused by pregnancy, delivery, or abortion) is 78,000, but a 2007 UN estimate puts the number at roughly 117,000, the highest number of maternal deaths in the world. But these are merely estimates with huge error margins. Women's health experts across the country agree that lack of accurate data is a big part of the problem.

Nine years ago, 189 countries came together and endorsed the United Nations General Assembly Millennium Declaration outlining eight millennium development goals (MDGs). Governments and donors have devoted intensive research, resources, and services to achieving these shared global priorities, but India is falling behind.

One of these goals, MDG-5, aims to reduce maternal mortality by 75 percent by 2015 from its 1990 levels. Even though about a fifth of maternal deaths worldwide are estimated to be in India, the government has not compiled up-to-date data on these often preventable tragedies.

The Indian government itself acknowledged that the "absence of reliable estimates" of maternal mortality makes the process of reducing it "both difficult and complex." The last nationwide study, which found that hemorrhage, infections, and unsafe abortions were the top three direct causes of maternal deaths, was for the period 1997 to 2003. There has been no reliable government study of maternal mortality since. For a country famed worldwide for its prowess in research, technology, and medical sophistication, this shows not a lack of capacity but a lack of political will.

Studies, such as the National Family and Health Survey and the District Level Household and Facility Survey, present useful information about access to antenatal and postnatal care, and whether women deliver at health institutions. But they do not tell us how many women die, where, and why, making it difficult to assess the impact of government's schemes and the progress on reducing maternal mortality.

Analysing maternal deaths, severe complications, and the medical, socio-economic, and cultural factors that contribute to them is critical to understanding and reducing maternal mortality. In Ranibai's case, hemorrhage was the direct cause of death. But a lack of transportation was a crucial contributing factor that denied her access to timely emergency obstetric care. There may have been other factors like poor nutrition, but no one will learn of them. The government, health-care workers, and women themselves will be unable to take more effective measures to prevent these deaths unless they have more and better information.

The most common method of monitoring adverse pregnancy outcomes is through confidential inquiries and reviews. The success of such techniques has been illustrated not only by various local nongovernmental and international organisations, but also by the Tamil Nadu state government.

Confidential inquiries empower women, their families, and health workers with a chance to be heard. Women in India not only suffer and die in alarming numbers, but they also suffer and die silently. Health workers strive in unenviable and harsh circumstances but are expected to churn out miraculous results. And bereaved families are often left with questions and complaints, but no realistic avenue for sharing them.

The disparities between those who can get luxury health care and those who struggle for the most basic care will not be resolved overnight. But tracking maternal deaths, severe complications, and their causes, and culling out lessons for change are essential first steps toward reducing that gap, and promoting the right to health, and life, for all Indian women.

Let us hope that someday very soon pregnant women in India no longer will die unseen, uncounted, and unheard. In the words of Renuka Chowdhury, the minister for women and child development, it would be a shame if in 2015 India presented itself on the global stage as "a country which can put Chandrayaan into orbit [but] cannot have women delivering babies (safely)."

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----- Original Message -----

From: WUNRN ListServe

To: WUNRN ListServe

Sent: Friday, January 02, 2009 11:01 AM

Subject: India - UN SR Health Report on Mission to India - Maternal Mortality Focus

 

 

WUNRN

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FULL REPORT OF THE UN SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE RIGHT TO HEALTH MISSION TO INDIA IS ATTACHED.

 

"The mission focused on the issue of maternal mortality with a view to understanding, in the context of the right to the highest attainable standard of health, the steps taken by India to reduce this phenomenon, and to make constructive recommendations....."

 

"The Special Rapporteur underlines that maternal health is not only a health issue. It is also a human rights issue, relating to - for example - women's rights to life, health, equality and non-discrimination."

 

"In India, 100,000 women die yearly in India during childbirth or pregnancy. There is an average of 300 maternal deaths for every 100,000 live births in India, which is higher than in many other middle-income and some low-income countries....Even though the Indian Rate of maternal deaths is declining, at the present rate neither India, nor any of its states, will reach their maternal mortality targets for 2015 arising from the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)...."

 

"Registration System and Maternal Death Audits: The Special Rapporteur noted with concern that there is no effective, reliable and comprehensive civil registration for accurately reporting births and deaths in India. There is evidence that women are silently dying in childbirth and during pregnancy. As many of these deaths are not registered, they remain uncounted and unreported. 

 

The Special Rapporteur strongly recommends that all States introduce, as a matter of urgency, a comprehensive, effective registration system, as well as a system of maternal death audits, such as those already in existence in Tamil Nadu and on a pilot basis in Rajasthan. It is of the utmost importance that all the circumstances of maternal deaths are examined in order to find out why the death occurred. A maternal death audit should be a non-judicial review, one that goes beyond medical reasons to identify the social, economic and cultural reasons that led or contributed to the death...."

 

 

 

A

 

 

Distr.

GENERAL

A/HRC/11/Add.4

29 February 2008

ENGLISH Only

 

 

 

HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

Seventh Session

Agenda Item 3

 

Promotion and Protection of All Human Rights, Civil, Political, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Including the Right to Development

 

REPORT OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE RIGHT OF EVERYONE TO THE ENJOYMENT OF THE HIGHEST ATTAINABLE STANDARD OF PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH

 

PRELIMINARY NOTE ON THE MISSION TO INDIA

 

ADDENDUM

 

FULL REPORT IS ATTACHED.

 

 

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