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Maternal health

Putting maternal health in context

An estimated 95 percent of women who die in childbirth or from pregnancy-related complications live in developing countries. Most of these deaths are preventable.

Many women across the world give birth without medical assistance, massively increasing the risk of complications or death. Serious, untreated complications during pregnancy or delivery can be fatal to both mother and infant. In 2020, a maternal death occurred nearly every 2 minutes, and an average of about 800 women died from preventable causes related to maternal health each day. Most of these deaths were preventable.

Reproductive health care is an integral part of the medical care Doctors Without Borders (MSF) provides, including in emergencies. Our maternal health programmes focus on reducing maternal and infant mortality through pregnancy and prenatal consultations, emergency obstetric care, postnatal follow-up, and access to family planning services and safe abortion care.
 

Quick facts about maternal health

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Every mother wants a healthy baby

Every mother wants a healthy baby

MSF medical staff around the world help bring more than 290,000 babies into the world each year. MSF's maternal health services are especially important in South Sudan, the country with the highest maternal mortality rate in the world. In Aweil State Hospital, Northern Bahr el Ghazal, our team of midwives is there night and day to ensure that women living in the state can deliver safely.

How MSF responds to maternal health

Our obstetric care programs aim to remedy the crucial "three delays" that can threaten the lives of both mother and child. These are: delay in deciding to seek care; delay in reaching a health facility; and delay in receiving appropriate treatment at the facility.

An MSF nurse provides care to a young patient at the MSF-supported facility in Ad-Dahi Hospital in Al Hudaydah. Yemen,
How MSF responds to maternal health
Maternal healthcare in Old Fangak - Midwife doing an ultrasound to a maternity patient.
 Isabella Mayes, midwife activity manager, is doing a consultation of a pregnant patient in Old Fangak, South Sudan
© Paula Casado Aguirregabiria/MSF
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Emergency obstetric care

Emergency obstetric care is a key component of this strategy. Emergency care administered promptly by qualified staff can save the lives of women experiencing complications during or just after delivery, when half of all maternal deaths occur. To help reduce barriers to use of our emergency obstetric services, we adapt services to local cultures and (as with all MSF programs) make them free of charge, as our beneficiaries are often among the poorest sector of the population.

An MSF matron takes the blood pressure of a pregnant woman at an internally displaced persons site in Ansongo, northern Mali.
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How you can help

msf.org.za

By donating to MSF, you form part of, and enable, a network of individuals worldwide which can continue our lifesaving maternity healthcare services.

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