Gates,
Slim target maternal, newborn health in Central America
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[October 22, 2015]
By Michael O'Boyle
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - The foundations of
the two of the world's richest men are stepping up efforts to use
innovative data and mobile technology to end easily preventable deaths
of mothers and newborns in the poorest pockets of Mexico and Central
America.
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The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation together with the Carlos Slim
Foundation are preparing to launch next year a second phase of Salud
Mesoamerica, a program hailed by experts as a success story.
The $170 million program, also backed by Spain, the Inter-American
Development Bank and local governments, is part of a trend in aid
financing that uses independently collected data to measure results
achieved by government programs and conditions financing on meeting
targets.
Governments "are learning how to access rural communities," Melinda
Gates told Reuters in an interview this week at the Global Maternal
Newborn Health Conference 2015 in Mexico City.
Inequality across Latin America is much deeper than in many parts of
the world, and unprecedented surveys by Salud Mesoamerica revealed
that pockets of Central America were on a par with the poorest parts
of Africa when it came to rates of malnutrition or lack of access to
health services.
The Carlos Slim Foundation aims to deploy a program it runs in 11
states in Mexico that uses mobile technology and special software to
monitor pregnant women in rural areas, improve nutrition and make
sure those with problematic pregnancies get special attention.
"It is like an algorithm that allows us to go step by step so that
none of the crucial elements of prenatal care are forgotten," said
Roberto Tapia, director of Slim's foundation.
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Another important part of the program is the "openness of the data,"
which is being compiled by the University of Washington's Institute
for Health Metrics and Evaluation.
"I can go to a specific region and a specific state ... in Mexico
and I can look and see exactly how we are doing on maternal health,
child health and neonatal deaths," Gates said. "That tells me as a
government how to act."
(Reporting by Michael O'Boyle; Editing by Simon Gardner and David
Gregorio)
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