Off the wire
Senior official calls for direct criticism in education campaign  • Beijing champions lead Kenya nomination list for best athlete  • Interview: China key to brokering global climate deal in Paris: European Parliament member  • 205,880 foreign nationals take Spanish nationality in 2014  • China promises road for every village  • Veteran Chinese coach teaches table tennis in Europe  • Quotable quotes from Xi's speech at second summit of Forum on China-Africa Cooperation  • Sino-Africa collaboration in wildlife protection crucial: campaigners  • Roundup: German parliament approves plan to join combat mission against IS  • Star sprinter sues Chinese company for using his image  
You are here:   Home

WHO finds major causes of maternal and newborn deaths in health facilities

Xinhua, December 4, 2015 Adjust font size:

The majority of maternal and newborn deaths occur worldwide around the time of birth, typically within the first 24 hours after childbirth, and most of these deaths are preventable, according to a new guideline released on Friday by the World Health Organization (WHO).

WHO's new Safe Childbirth Checklist and Implementation Guide targets the major causes of maternal and newborn complications and deaths, including post-partum haemorrhage, infection, obstructed labor, preeclampsia and birth asphyxia.

WHO said of the more than 130 million births occurring each year, an estimated 303,000 result in the mother's death, 2.6 million in stillbirth, and another 2.7 million in a newborn death within the first 28 days of birth. The majority of these deaths occur in low-resource settings, often lacking skilled birth attendants.

"Far too many women and children are still dying in childbirth from preventable causes often linked to poor quality of care," said Marie-Paule Kieny, WHO Assistant Director-General, Health Systems and Innovation. "The WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist will help health care workers follow the essential care standards for every birth."

The checklist synthesized existing evidence-based WHO guidelines and recommendations into a single and practical bedside tool targeted at improving adherence to best practices, including adequate communication around the time of delivery.

It identified four pause points each corresponding to a specific period in a health worker's normal flow of work: when the mother is admitted, just before pushing (or before Caesarean section), within one hour after birth and before the mother and newborn are discharged. These pause points allow birth attendants to make their "checks" at times when they can not only protect the mother and newborn against dangerous complications, but also at the most convenient times in their work flow. Endit