Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Article from "Every Mother Counts"




R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Every Mother Counts Staff, July 16, 2013
Most of us spend very little time partially naked at the mercy of strangers, but when we do, we want to be treated with respect and our dignity protected.  For mothers all over the world, respect and dignity are never more important than during childbirth, one of the most challenging, painful and potentially frightening times in their lives.  For too many women however, that’s not part of the care package when they deliver in hospitals and birth centers.
What exactly does disrespect look like?  The White Ribbon Alliance, a global network of maternal health advocates describes it like this: Too often, pregnant women seeking maternity care receive ill treatment that ranges from relatively subtle disrespect of their autonomy and dignity to outright abuse: physical assault, verbal insults, discrimination, abandonment, or detention in facilities for failure to pay. Disrespect and abuse of women during maternity care is a problem that has been obscured by a "veil of silence" and can significantly impact women’s willingness to seek out life-saving maternity care in facilities
Here’s what disrespect looks like in real life:
Headlines in the Washington Post and the Independent spell out an atrocity that’s played out in one form or another all over the world.  A hospital in Zimbabwe charges women $5 every time they scream during labor.  If they don’t pay, they’re held captive in the hospital until someone covers their bill.  In a country where most people earn less than $150 per year, delivering in a hospital is a financial burden that costs upwards of $50.  When you add additional charges like screaming fees the price becomes a human rights violation. In Peru women resisted delivering in birth centers or hospitals, even ones that were upgraded and well staffed.  That’s because when they got there no one spoke to them in their own language or called them by name.  Nurses and doctors ridiculed them for wanting to practice their own cultural birth preferences.  Doctors sometimes performed sterilizations during c-sections without their patients’ knowledge or consent, deciding for themselves that when women have enough children. In the United States, disrespect can be more insidious.  It’s the treatment a woman might experience if she’s transferred to a hospital after an attempted home birth when nurses and doctors scold her for wanting to deliver at home and putting her child in danger.  It’s the nurse who rolls her eyes at an “all natural” patient who doesn’t want an epidural or the patient who is chided for questioning her doctor’s advice.  It might come from the office worker who shuffles women seeking medical insurance from one line to another or the doctor who keeps his patients waiting for long periods of time.  It might also be the c-section called because a doctor is tired of waiting for labor to progress.
With as many cultural differences dictating what respectful maternity care is, can we even define it? Debra Pascali-Bonaro, Chairperson of the The International MotherBaby Childbirth Initiative thinks we can.  Working with input from dozens of international organizations and a hundred individual maternal health experts IMBCI created an initiative that works for every country, every culture and every mother.  Check out their link for more info!

Sunday, June 30, 2013

What do you picture when you think of the way you'd want to be treated when it's time to have a baby? Pregnant women around the world seeking maternity care from the health systems in their countries instead receive ill treatment that ranges from disrespect of their autonomy and dignity to outright abuse: physical assault, verbal insults, discrimination, abandonment, or detention in facilities for failure to pay. Disrespect and abuse during maternity care are a violation of a woman's basic human rights. We have to break the silence.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=K105F9o3HtU
Break The Silence!

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Superfood for Babies

Save the Children has launched its new report Superfood for Babies: How overcoming the barriers to breastfeeding will save children’s lives’.
In Pakistan, Save the Children held a ceremony to launch the report, where participants and speakers came to a unanimous agreement that breastfeeding is the most effective and tested method to protect children from killer diseases as soon as they are born.
“The lives of 95 babies could be saved every hour - 830,000 a year, if new mothers around the world breastfed immediately after giving birth”, said Dr. Qudsia Uzma, Director Health & Nutrition at Save the Children, while sharing the salient features of the report. She highlighted that if babies receive colostrum – the mother’s first milk – within an hour of birth, it will kick start the child’s immune system, making them three times more likely to survive. If the mother continues feeding for the next six months, then a child growing up in the developing world is up to 15 times less likely to die from killer diseases like pneumonia and diarrhea.

Saturday, February 16, 2013