Johannesburg - One baby dies nearly every hour
in South Africa because the country does not have enough skilled
health-care workers.
According to a hard-hitting report released on
Tuesday, 7 500 babies who are born alive die on their first day - that’s
21 babies every day or almost one an hour.
In addition, 3 000 mothers around the country die every year due to complications during pregnancy or childbirth.
These shocking statistics were revealed at the
launch of Save the Children SA - the new and independent arm of the
world’s largest children’s rights organisation.
The organisation also released the 2013 State
of the World’s Mothers report, which ranks every country based on
analyses of the health, education and economic status of mothers and
wellbeing of children to determine the best and worst places in the
world to be a mother.
Finland, Sweden and Norway made the top rankings while the Democratic Republic of Congo was ranked bottom of the pile at 176.
South Africa ranked 77 - and while the country
has made significant gains in the rolling out of antiretroviral
treatment and prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, Neven
Hendricks, chairman of Save the Children SA, said the report showed
there hadn’t been progress in saving lives at the time of birth.
“It is sad and unnecessary that children go
through this when we have the resources as a country… This country
produces some of the best doctors but the rates of these deaths are
unacceptable. If this doesn’t spur us into action, nothing else will,”
he said.
The burden of baby mortality falls
disproportionally on poor and vulnerable communities, Save the Children
SA chief executive Pam Innes said.
“Most of the deaths could be prevented by
ensuring mothers and babies have access to skilled care, regardless of
their social standing. We’re here to help the government and civil
society, but mostly all children, and to ensure that Mother’s Day is a
happy day for all mothers and children in the country.”
According to the SA Nursing Council, there was a
gradual decline in the number of nurses with specialist qualifications
on the register for intensive care, operating theatre, advanced
midwifery and psychiatry.
The report indicates the world faces a shortage
of 5 million health workers of all types. “And there is an acute
shortage of at least 1 million frontline health workers in the
developing world, including 350 000 with midwifery skills”.
In addition to insufficient health workers,
many of those working weren’t well enough trained, equipped and
supported to deliver life-saving maternal and newborn care.
Sub-Saharan African mothers and babies faced
the greatest risks in maternal and newborn death rates - the bottom 10
countries on the Mother’s Index are all in sub-Saharan Africa.
According to the report, 35 percent of newborn
deaths are caused by complications of premature birth, while birth
complications and severe infections make up a large percentage of other
deaths.
According to the UN, four products could assist
in saving newborns - steroid injections for women in pre-term labour
(to reduce deaths due to prem babies’ breathing problems), resuscitation
devices, chlorhexidine cord cleansing (prevent umbilical cord
infections), and injectable antibiotics to treat newborn sepsis and
pneumonia.
“If all women delivered with a midwife in a
facility… providing basic emergency care, it is estimated that 56
percent of maternal, foetal and newborn deaths could be prevented,” the
report says.
Noted local singer Tu Nokwe, born in distress
in her mother’s bedroom in KwaZulu-Natal, said South Africans needed
each other to find practical solutions. “We’re not saying South Africa
isn’t doing anything, but 21 babies dying each day is not a joke, it’s a
disgrace.”
No comments:
Post a Comment