Current:Home > FinanceThe number of mothers who die due to pregnancy or childbirth is 'unacceptable' -Blueprint Money Mastery
The number of mothers who die due to pregnancy or childbirth is 'unacceptable'
View
Date:2025-04-17 00:48:38
There's been virtually no progress in reducing the number of women who die due to pregnancy or childbirth worldwide in recent years. That's the conclusion of a sweeping new report released jointly by the World Health Organization and other United Nations agencies as well as the World Bank.
The report estimates that there were 287,000 maternal deaths globally in 2020 — the most recent year these statistics cover. That's the equivalent of a woman dying every two minutes — or nearly 800 deaths a day.
And it represents only about a 7% reduction since 2016 — when world leaders committed to a so-called "sustainable development goal" of slashing maternal mortality rates by more than a third by 2030.
The impact on women is distributed extremely unequally: Two regions – Australia and New Zealand, and Central and Southern Asia – actually saw significant declines (by 35% and 16% respectively) in their maternal mortality rates. Meanwhile, 70% of maternal deaths are in just one region: sub-Saharan Africa.
Many of these deaths are due to causes like severe bleeding, high blood pressure and pregnancy-related infections that could be prevented with access to basic health care and family planning. Yet the report also finds that worldwide about a third of women don't get even half of the recommended eight prenatal checkups.
At a press conference to unveil the report, world health officials described the findings as "unacceptable" and called for "urgent" investments in family planning and filling a global shortage of an estimated 900,000 midwives.
"No woman should die in childbirth," said Dr. Anshu Banerjee, an assistant director general of WHO. "It's a wake-up call for us to take action."
He said this was all the more so given that the report doesn't capture the likely further setbacks since 2020 resulting from the impacts of the COVID pandemic and current global economic slowdowns.
"That means that it's going to be more difficult for low income countries, particularly, to invest in health," said Banerjee. Yet without substantially more money and focus on building up primary health care to improve a woman's chances of surviving pregnancy, he said, "We are at risk of even further declines."
veryGood! (983)
Related
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Periodic flooding hurts Mississippi. But could mitigation there hurt downstream in Louisiana?
- 2024 Olympics: What Made Triathlete Tyler Mislawchuk Throw Up 10 times After Swim in Seine River
- CD match, raise, or 9% APY! Promos heat up before Fed rate cut. Hurry to get the best rate
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- ‘Taking it off the speculative market’: These nonprofits help tenants afford to stay put
- Cardi B asks court to award her primary custody of her children with Offset, divorce records show
- Kate Douglass 'kicked it into high gear' to become Olympic breaststroke champion
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Memo to the Supreme Court: Clean Air Act Targeted CO2 as Climate Pollutant, Study Says
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Appeals court: Separate, distinct minority groups can’t join together to claim vote dilution
- Jury reaches split verdict in baby abandonment case involving Dennis Eckersley’s daughter
- Justice Department sues TikTok, accusing the company of illegally collecting children’s data
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Florida-bound passengers evacuated at Ohio airport after crew reports plane has mechanical issue
- Judge suspends Justin Timberlake’s driver’s license over DWI arrest in New York
- AP Decision Notes: What to expect in Washington state’s primaries
Recommendation
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
California dad missing for nearly 2 weeks after mysterious crash into street pole
Giant pandas return to nation's capital by end of year | The Excerpt
Billie Eilish and Charli XCX Dance on Pile of Underwear in NSFW Guess Music Video
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Florida braces for flooding from a possible tropical storm
Olympic golf desperately needs a team format. Here's a proposal.
An assassin, a Putin foe’s death, secret talks: How a sweeping US-Russia prisoner swap came together