How Gender Impacts Safe Motherhood
IGWG Training Taskforce:
Gender and Safe Motherhood
Safe Motherhood Basics
Childbirth: life-threatening risk for women in the developing world
• As of 2005, it is estimated that 536,000 women die yearly from causes related to pregnancy and birth.
– 99% of those deaths occur in the developing world
• Another 10–20 million women every year face severe health problems, such as obstetric fistula.
Common causes of maternal death globally
Other Indirect Causes
25%
Severe Bleeding21%
Unsafe Abortion14%
Eclampsia13%
Other Direct Causes
11%
Infection8%
Obstructed Labor
8%
The three deadly delays
1. Recognizing signs and deciding to seek care
2. Identifying and reaching a medical facility
3. Receiving adequate and appropriate treatment
How can maternal deaths be prevented?
Priority interventions include:• Skilled attendance at all births• Emergency obstetric care• Reproductive health and family planning services,
including safe abortion
Also, greater focus on postnatal care
Global estimates indicate that maternal mortality could be reduced…
• By 75%, with skilled attendance at all births backed by emergency obstetric care
• By 33%, with voluntary family planning
• By 13%, with access to safe abortion
How can maternal deaths be prevented? (cont.)
Who does maternal mortality and morbidity affect?
– Women
– Children of women who die in childbirth • 2–10 times greater likelihood of death within first two years
– Family, community, and country• Decreased economic contributions to household, paid and nonpaid
• Psychological and social impact on family, including increased number of children leaving school
• US$15 billion estimated cost of maternal mortality
Key Gender-Related Barriers
Gender-related barriers to safe motherhood
– Poor nutrition • Girls
• Pregnant women
– Early first pregnancy
– Early marriage• Pregnancy-related deaths are the leading cause of mortality for
15–19 year-old girls worldwide.
– Lack of information and education
– Restriction of women’s movement outside the home
– Gendered division of household labor
Gender-related barriers to safe motherhood (cont.)
Gender-based violence
- Intimate partner violence against women may increase during pregnancy
- Female genital cutting
Gender-related barriers to safe motherhood (cont.)
– Lack of decisionmaking power
• Resources for healthcare
• How many children to have
• Spacing between pregnancies
• Use of contraception
Gender-related barriers to safe motherhood (cont.)
– Exist at many different levels
• Individuals
• Couples
• Families and communities
• Health service and other institutions
• Policies
Gender-related barriers to safe motherhood (cont.)
Safe motherhood related to women’s status
• Even though women are honored in all cultures as the givers of life, they are also often dishonored as human beings.
• In short, women’s status is a strong predictor of
maternal mortality.
Thank You!
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