Most parts of world saw maternal mortality rates spike in 2020
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[February 23, 2023]
By Sriparna Roy
(Reuters) - Maternal mortality rates climbed or stagnated in nearly all
regions across the world in 2020, according to a report released by U.N.
agencies on Wednesday, marking a major setback in global efforts to
combat complications during childbirth or pregnancy.
The report, which tracks maternal mortality nationally, regionally and
globally from 2000 to 2020, showed there were an estimated 287,000
maternal deaths worldwide in 2020, and it marks only a slight decrease
from 309,000 in 2016.
That translates to a woman dying every two minutes during childbirth or
pregnancy, the report estimated.
"It is unacceptable that so many women continue to die needlessly in
pregnancy and childbirth. Over 280,000 fatalities in a single year is
unconscionable," said Natalia Kanem, executive director at the United
Nations Population Fund.
The data suggests that deaths rose in areas with less access to timely
health services, said study author and World Health Organization
epidemiologist Jenny Cresswell.
In two of the eight UN regions – Europe and Northern America, and Latin
America and the Caribbean – the maternal mortality rate increased from
2016 to 2020, by 17% and 15%, respectively.
The report, however, noted there was a significant reduction in maternal
deaths between 2000 and 2015, where they fell roughly 2.7% every year,
but the progress largely stalled or even reversed after a point.
Most deaths were largely concentrated in the poorest parts of the world,
and in countries affected by conflict.
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A pregnant woman is seen through the
curtain at a maternity hospital in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv,
October 31, 2004. REUTERS/Mykhailo Markiv
Cresswell said the global mortality
rates have been "effectively zero" in the first five years since the
UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) came into effect.
The SDGs aim to reduce maternal deaths to 70 per 100,000 live births
globally by 2030.
The 2020 rate was estimated at 223 maternal deaths per 100,000 live
births.
The COVID-19 pandemic may have further held back progress, according
to the UN agencies.
But "the trends that we're seeing have been occurring for five or
six years at least, so they do predate the pandemic by several
years," said Cresswell.
(Reporting by Sriparna Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry
Jacob-Phillips)
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