ICY![]()
YOUTH INFORMATION
No: 2008/30
(E-Newsletter
from network of youth organizations in India)
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ICYO - Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India.
ICYO - India’s largest network of urban and rural
youth.
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India needs political will to reduce maternal mortality:
WHO
New Delhi--
India's maternal mortality is high due to a lack of political will and
administrative and managerial failures rather than absence of expertise, an
article published in WHO magazine said.
India has the
largest number of births per year (27 million) in the world. With its high
maternal mortality of about 300-500 per 100,000 births, about 75,000 to 150,000
women die every year in India after giving birth.
"This is
about 20 percent of the global burden. Hence India's progress in reducing
maternal deaths is crucial to the global achievement of Millennium Development
Goal 5," Dileep Mavalankar, Kranti Vora and M. Prakasamma have said in an
article in the April issue of WHO magazine.
They also pulled
up the central government's flagship National Rural Health Mission, which aims
to provide quality healthcare to the rural populace, for not making any
difference in villages.
The article,
titled "Achieving Millennium Development Goal 5: Is India serious?",
said: "We feel strongly that without a clear strategic focus on skilled
birth attendants, emergency obstetric care (EmOC) and referral services, India
will not be able to reduce maternal mortality rapidly."
While both
Mavalankar and Vora are from the Centre for Management of Health System at the
Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, Prakasamma works for the Academy for
Nursing Studies in Hyderabad.
"Why is
India's maternal mortality high in spite of rapid economic growth? We believe
the key reasons are political, administrative and managerial rather than a lack
of technical knowledge."
For politicians,
health is a low priority, they noted.
"Government
expenditure on health has been a mere 0.9 percent of GDP, while a large
percentage of the budget is spent on defence, un-targeted subsidies and
non-vital infrastructure. No political party has maternal health on its
priority agenda."
In 1992, India
launched the Child Survival and Safe Motherhood programme (at a cost of about
$300 million) followed by a five-year programme ($250 million) called
Reproductive and Child Health-I in 1997.
"Although
EmOC was one of the strategies, it was not implemented due to lack of focus and
limited management capacity. Even today the government does not systematically
monitor how many EmOC facilities are fully functional," the WHO magazine
said.
"In spite of
rhetoric from the National Rural Health Mission, changes on the ground to
improve maternal health care are slow and lack focus."
In the 1960s,
India created a cadre of two-year trained rural midwives called "auxiliary
nurse midwives" (ANMs) to provide maternal and child health services.
But the report
said their designation as 'auxiliary' undermined their status and function as
midwives, leading to the lack of professional or skilled midwives in the
country.
"Lack of
qualified midwives is a major human resource constraint for providing locally
accessible skilled delivery care for rural women. India ignored the development
of a midwifery cadre, which has led to persistent dependence on traditional
birth attendants for deliveries and a high maternal mortality rate," it
said.
India has only
three technical officers for maternal health at the national level. Almost no
state in India has a maternal health director, the WHO report said.
"This
explains why maternal health strategies are not implemented effectively, and
maternal deaths and pregnancy outcomes are not monitored. Lack of management
capacity in the health system has led to poor quality services and slow
progress." (Push Journal)
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Youth Information is published by
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Youth Organizations (ICYO)
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Indian Committee of Youth
Organizations (ICYO) is a registered non-profit, non-governmental network
organization, committed in developing areas of mutual cooperation and
understanding among different youth voluntary agencies, youth groups, clubs and
individuals working in the field of youth welfare in India.
ICYO
functions as an umbrella organization of youth NGOs in India. It's family
consists of
over 356 organizations spread in 122 districts of 22 states from different
corners of India.
Our goal:
To improve and extend the youth work and
services through Youth Organizations;
To enhance and demonstrate youth work in the society;
To promote effective youth programmmes;
To organize network of civil society organizations working towards the
development of youth work;
To organize seminars, conferences, workshops, trainings;
To maintain international relation with organizations promoting young people in
their programmes and activities
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC,
United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY); Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Youth for Habitat International Network (YFHIN); CRIN, South Asia Youth
Environment Network (SAYEN), Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;
ATSECE-DELHI, Indian Partner of AIDS Care Watch Campaign;
Steering Committee member of World Bank's
YDP Network;
Working relation with Indian Association of Parliamentarians (IAPPD);
International Medical Parliamentarians Organizations (IMPO);
Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD);
World Youth Foundation, Malaysia.