Number of hospital births goes up but maternal deaths
still on rise in India
A programme being implemented in India to promote
institutional delivery among poor pregnant women has not reduced maternal
deaths as much, especially in poor areas, new research has found. The programme
that provides monetary incentives for women to give birth in health facilities
instead of at home was launched in 2005. The so called Janani Suraksha Yojana
(JSY) programme successfully increased births at facilities, but due to its implementation
in a fragile health system context, it has been less effective at reducing
fatalities, the study said. ‘The cash transfer programmes are by themselves
inadequate to improve health outcomes,’ said researcher Bharat Randive from
Umea University in Sweden.
‘While the programme can improve service utilisation, it
will not reduce maternal and neo-natal deaths unless the socioeconomic
inequalities in access to facility-based care are also addressed and the care
is of good quality,’ Randive noted in an official statement. ‘Emergency
obstetric care, which is essential to save lives of pregnant women and babies,
is grossly unavailable at public facilities in the poor states of India that
form a global hotspot for avoidable maternal deaths,’ Randive pointed out in
his research conducted for his doctoral dissertation. In his research, Randive
looked at nine Indian states and compared access to care and health outcomes in
rich and poor areas.
The poor areas of these nine less developed states had 135
more maternal deaths for every 100,000 births and the decline in maternal
deaths during the programme in these areas was four times slower than in the
rich areas, the study found. ‘In five years, institutional births increased
significantly from a pre-programme average of 20 percent to 49 percent.
However, no significant association between district-level institutional birth
proportions and maternal mortality rate was found,’ the study said.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
19.01.2016
We must always have old memories and young hopes
Arsène Houssaye
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