| Maternal mortality |
| Society + Culture | ||||||||||
| By MWC News | ||||||||||
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Afghanistan among worst in world
Such is the reality in many remote villages of the Wakhan corridor in Badakshan, where there is little or no access to healthcare. In this rugged area in the Pamir Mountains it takes between four and six days on horse-back or by yak to reach the nearest medical facility, provided bad weather has not blocked the roads. Abdul Haq, a resident of Big Pamir village, also endured his 29-year-old wife dying during delivery. "We don't have clinics, schools or [government] offices here. Who do we go to with our problems?" he asked. "When women or children get sick there are two ways [here]. Either Allah makes them well or they die," he said. Haq expects to remain a widower. The area is sparsely populated and there are not enough women to marry. Ilyas Bai is another widower in the Small Pamir village. His 20-year-old wife died six years ago giving birth to their first child. "We do not have doctors and medicines. We cannot take the patients to other places. When it snows no one can move around," he said. With 6,500 maternal deaths per every 100,000 live births, Badakshan province has the highest maternal mortality rate in the world, according to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). "Badakshan province has been identified as the worst anywhere in terms of maternal mortality," said Abdul Momin Jalali of the public health provincial department in Badakshan. The reason, says Hajera Zia Baharestani, a gynaecologist with the Faizabad maternity hospital, is a combination of a "lack of awareness, lack of access to healthcare clinics and lack of doctors and midwives in the health centres". According to a recent study by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), only 3.3 percent of the women in the area had given birth in a medical facility. Many of the locals interviewed by IRIN said the women gave birth by the river bank during the summer and in the animal sheds during the winter. As in many parts of the country, women are expected to do all domestic chores right up to childbirth. Even where there is access to health services, these are often inadequate or overburdened. "Building clinics is not enough," said Baharestani. "What is needed [more] are trained doctors and midwives." Facts on maternal mortality * Every 28 minutes a woman dies in Afghanistan during childbirth While Badakshan fares the worst, the situation throughout Afghanistan remains dismal. UNICEF officials in Kabul say that Afghanistan has the second-highest maternal mortality rates in the world - 1,600 per 100,000 live births - after Sierra Leone. © IRIN Quote this article on your site | Views: 3644
1. 20-02-2007 17:01 US mass murder of Afghan Women & Kids Based on the latest UNICEF data (see: http://www.unicef.org/ ) Bush Amerika and its Bush-ite Allies have been involved for over 5 years in the deaths of 145,000 Afghan women perinatally, 1.4 million Afghan females in total and 2.0 million under-5 year old Afghan infants - Mass Avoidable Death (MAD) and US-Coalition-NATO Occupier MASS MURDER through NON-PROVISION of the life-sustaining food, medicine and medical care requisites unequivocally demanded of Occupiers for their Conquered Subjects by the Geneva Conventions. Tell everyone you know about this on-going atrocity that involves the following "civilized" countries: the US, Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, UK and Japan. Those complicit in this on-going racist mass murder of Women and Children should be subject to personal and collective intra-national and inter-national Sanctions and Boycotts (as were SUCCESSFULLY applied to the racist Apartheid South Africa Minority Regime for the denial of 1 man 1 vote to non-Europeans and accompanying abuses). Guest 2. 20-02-2007 18:37 It gets worse See the recent study by British Geological Survey (BGS), Press release which was sent to MWC today Economic future of Afghanistan grounded in Copper Registered Write Comment
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