Summary
·
The figure
represents almost 800 women dying every day from preventable causes related to
pregnancy or childbirth. Maternal mortality rates have increased in the world's
poorest regions.
A woman dies every two minutes due
to pregnancy or childbirth complications, despite maternal mortality rates
dropping by a third in 20 years, the United Nations said Thursday.
Rates fell significantly between
2000 and 2015 but largely stagnated between 2016 and 2020 -- and in some
regions have even reversed, the UN said.
The overall maternal mortality rate
dropped by 34.3 percent over a 20-year period -- from 339 maternal deaths per
100,000 live births in 2000 to 223 maternal deaths in 2020, according to a
report by the World Health Organisation and other UN agencies.
Nonetheless, that means nearly 800
women died per day in 2020 -- or around one every two minutes.
Belarus recorded the biggest decline
-- down 95.5 percent -- while Venezuela saw the highest increase. Between 2000
and 2015, the biggest rise was in the United States.
Also Read: Maternal deaths are ‘still a
major challenge’
"While pregnancy should be a
time of immense hope and a positive experience for all women, it is tragically
still a shockingly dangerous experience for millions around the world,"
said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
"These new statistics reveal
the urgent need to ensure every woman and girl has access to critical health
services... and that they can fully exercise their reproductive rights."
The report found that between 2016
and 2020, maternal mortality rates dropped in only two of the eight UN regions:
in Australia and New Zealand by 35 percent.
The rate went up in Europe and
Northern America by 17 percent, and in Latin America and the Caribbean by 15
percent. Elsewhere, it stagnated.
The two European countries witnessing
"significant increases" are Greece and Cyprus, the report's author
Jenny Cresswell told journalists.
Maternal deaths remain largely
concentrated in the world's poorest regions and in conflict-affected countries.
Around 70 percent of those deaths
recorded in 2020 were in sub-Saharan Africa, where the rate is "136 times
bigger" than in Australia and New Zealand, Cresswell said.
In Afghanistan, the Central African
Republic, Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan,
Syria and Yemen -- all facing severe humanitarian crises -- rates were more
than twice the global average.
Severe bleeding, infections,
complications from unsafe abortions and underlying conditions such as HIV/Aids
are among the leading causes of death, the report said -- which are all largely
preventable and treatable.
The WHO said it was
"critical" that women had control over their reproductive health --
particularly about if and when to have children, so that they can plan and
space childbearing to protect their health.
Natalia Kanem, head of the UN
Population Fund, said the rate of women "needlessly" dying was
"unconscionable".
"We can and must do better by
urgently investing in family planning and filling the global shortage of
900,000 midwives," she said.
While the report covers data up to
2020, the WHO's Anshu Banerjee told journalists that the statistics since then
look bleak, due to the Covid-19 pandemic and the economic crisis.
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