Report finds maternal deaths in India preventable
NEW DELHI — Tens of thousands of Indian women die needlessly every year during pregnancy or because of childbirth-related problems, a human rights group said Wednesday, blaming a medical system hobbled by poor planning, caste discrimination, a lack of accountability and limited access to emergency care.
India has a maternal mortality rate 16 times higher than Russia, and 10 times higher than China, Human Rights Watch said in a report. That means one out of every 70 Indian women who reach reproductive age will die because of pregnancy, childbirth or during unsafe abortions.
“For an emerging global economic power famous for its medical prowess, India continues to have unacceptably high maternal mortality levels,” the report said.
Aruna Kashyap, a lead researcher on the report, summed it up simply: “Seventy-five percent of maternal deaths (in India) are preventable.”
While India has had an overall decline in maternal mortality in the past few years, the rights group says those figures mask continuing — and sometimes worsening — problems in parts of the country.
Some states, including the heavily populated north Indian states of Haryana and Punjab, “actually showed an increase in maternal mortality. And significant disparities based on income, caste, place of residence and other arbitrary factors persist even within every state, including those that appear to be improving access to care for pregnant women and mothers.”
The results have led to staggering numbers. In 2005, the last year for which overall figures were available, about 117,000 women died due to maternal-related reasons, Kashyap said.
A big part of the problem, the report found, was a lack of accountability over maternal mortality, with government officials, hospitals and health workers dodging responsibility for the problems that lead to such high death rates.
Those problems range from ill-trained obstetric staff to charging crippling fees to poor villagers — $10 for a delivery in some clinics, plus $1 to cut the umbilical cord and $1 for the delivery room cleaner. Those numbers may not look high, but many Indian villagers support their families on less than $2 a day, and are seldom able to save at all.
Plus, deliveries, and pre- and postnatal care are supposed to be free.
“These guarantees exist on paper, but when it comes to translating paper guarantees into practice there’s a big gap,” Kashyap said in an interview.
The report said that in Uttar Pradesh, the country’s most populous state, only about one in 100 community health centers, the government-run clinics where many women deliver, have storage facilities for blood. In many smaller hospitals, even minor complications often require transporting mothers more than 60 miles (100 kilometers) over bad roads to larger hospitals.
In addition, caste discrimination continues to plague Indian mothers. One 2007 study in six north Indian states found that 61 percent of maternal deaths were among Dalits — as “untouchables” are now called — and the indigenous people known here as tribals, Human Rights Watch said. Those two communities are at the very bottom of India’s complex social ladder, and are far more likely to live without equal access to jobs, education or health care.
In Uttar Pradesh, caste discrimination is an ingrained part of the medical system, doctors and activists say.
“Upper-caste health workers refuse to visit Dalit communities,” said Lenin Raghuvanshi, a rights activist. Because of that “pregnant Dalit women do not get (nutritional) supplements and the majority of them are anemic.”
Human Rights Watch made a series of recommendations to improve maternal medical care, including requiring that all pregnancy-related deaths be formally reported to authorities, institutionalizing a system of investigating those deaths and establishing an early response system, including a telephone hot line, for obstetric emergencies.
Related News
Human trafficking from India to be probedSeptember 28th, 2009 NEW DELHI - With growing incidence of poor and vulnerable women from India being lured into the flesh trade, the National Commission for Women (NCW) has constituted teams to investigate trafficking channels from various districts in Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Delhi to the Middle East. "The NCW has been been deeply disturbed with the recent spurt of missing girls in NCR (National Capital Region).
Women's panel to tackle abandoned NRI wives' complaintsAugust 24th, 2009 Indo-ASIAN NEWS SERVICE
NEW DELHI - With a rise in cases of Indian women being deserted by their husbands on foreign shores, the National Commission for Women (NCW) Monday announced setting up of an NRI Cell on Aug 27 to tend to such complaints and counsel the victims. "Parliament has designated NCW as the coordinating agency at the national level to receive and process all the complaints related to Indian women deserted by their overseas Indian husbands.
Amnesty International says rural and Indian pregnant women in Peru get unequal health careJuly 9th, 2009 Amnesty: Peru's pregnant Indian get unequal careLIMA, Peru — Peru's government doesn't provide adequate care for pregnant women in the impoverished highlands and jungle, a failure reflected in one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the hemisphere, a human rights group said Thursday. "Health services for pregnant women in Peru are like a lottery.
UN agency, WHO hail budgetJuly 7th, 2009 NEW DELHI - The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and World Health Organisation (WHO) Tuesday lauded the union budget, saying it would help achieve millennium development goals. We got to recognize that government of India has taken a strong step.
Global crises threaten progress on MDGsJuly 7th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Progress made in earlier years to achieve the millennium development goals (MDGs) in the fields of health, education, sanitation and women empowerment in India and South Asia was endangered by global economic and food crises, the United Nations said Tuesday. "More than halfway to the 2015 deadline to achieve the MDGs, major advances in the fight against poverty and hunger have begun to slow or even reverse as a result of the global economic and food crisis," the UN's MDG report said.
Self-help groups to arm women against economic slowdown: TirathJune 26th, 2009 NEW DELHI - India is strengthening its self-help groups to involve women in income generating work to arm them against the impact of economic meltdown, Women and Child Development Minister Krishna Tirath said. Addressing the plenary session of the third East Asia Gender Equality Ministerial Meeting at Seoul Thursday, Tirath said India is committed to uplift women in every sphere of life.
WHO chief: Flu pandemic will demonstrate tragic consequences of public health neglectJune 16th, 2009 Flu pandemic deaths linked to poor public healthUNITED NATIONS — The swine flu pandemic will demonstrate "in extremely tragic ways" the consequences of the failure to promote public health and ensure basic care during pregnancy and childbirth in developing countries, the head of the World Health Organization warned. Dr. Margaret Chan told a U.N.
Separatists end weeklong general strike in Indian KashmirJune 9th, 2009 Separatists end general strike in Indian KashmirSRINAGAR, India — Schools, shops and government offices reopened in most of Indian Kashmir on Tuesday as separatist groups ended a weeklong general strike called to protest the deaths of two young women. Vehicles were back on the streets and Kashmiris thronged shops in the main city of Srinagar and other places after a week of unrest that left one person dead and more than 400 injured.
Sharad Yadav demands a separate quota for OBCs in Women's BillJune 6th, 2009 NEW DELHI - After threatening to consume poison if the Women's Reservation Bill is passed Janata Dal (U) chief Sharad Yadav on Saturday demanded a separate quota for backward castes to be included in the Women's Bill. "I am not asking for a reservation of 33 per cent (for women), it could be even 50 per cent.
Thousands protest in Indian Kashmir after 2 women found deadMay 30th, 2009 Protests in Kashmir as 2 women are found deadSRINAGAR, India — Massive protests and clashes erupted in Indian Kashmir on Saturday after the bodies of two young women were found amid claims that they were raped and murdered by Indian soldiers, officials and locals said. Indian authorities denied the allegations, saying the women appeared to have drowned in a local stream.
New Swiss Guard commander says he'd consider letting women serve in papal security corpsMay 5th, 2009 New Swiss Guard chief open to letting women serveVATICAN CITY — The new commander of the Swiss Guards says he'd be open to letting women serve in the papal security corps. In an interview with private Mediaset television Tuesday, Col.
Malay Indian women "uninterested" in businessMarch 22nd, 2009 KUALA LUMPUR - Most Malaysian-Indian women in the lower-income group prefer watching television over availing business opportunities available to them. Speaking on the condition of women living in squatter areas, low-cost flats and estates, Dr.
Women just 7.53 percent of central government work force: OfficialMarch 9th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Women constitute just 7.52 percent of the central government work force, revealed T.K.A. Nair, the principal secretary to the prime minister, Sunday.
India's indigenous warships may have women officers onboardFebruary 25th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Envisaging a 20 percent women crew on the future Indian Navy warships, the first indigenous aircraft carrier is designed to have berthing facilities for women officers. Currently women are not allowed onboard Indian warships.
NCW member gets notice over Mangalore pub probeFebruary 4th, 2009 NEW DELHI - The ministry of women and child development, headed by Renuka Chowdhury, Thursday evening issued a show-cause notice to National Commission for Women (NCW) member Nirmala Venkatesh, who probed the pub attack on women in Mangalore, for her 'unbecoming' action and 'dereliction of duty'. 'Your acts are unbecoming of a member of the National Commission for Women.
October 7th, 2009 at 4:54 am
There are lot of jobs in medical billing find a school to get a degree in few months more info
bit.ly/l7ZmZ