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Maternal Mortality In Somaliland In Decline But Still Worrying

Issue 364
Front Page
News Headlines

UN Votes For Somalia Peace Force

“The British Government's Position Has Always Been To Be Sympathetic To Somaliland's Demand For Independence” Lord Malloch-Brown  

Court Rules Somali Ex-Government Official Can Be Sued In U.S. Courts For Violations Of Human Rights

Somalia And Somaliland Raised At Foreign Office Questions

Egyptian Teacher Kidnapped In Burao Released

Somali Politian Executed For 'Apostasy'

Local and Regional Affairs

Maternal Mortality In Somaliland In Decline But Still Worrying

Somaliland: A New Company To Provide Gas

Somaliland: Admas University College Opens A New Campus

Last Ethiopian Troops Leave Somalia's Capital

UN Orders Eritrea To Withdraw From Disputed Djibouti Border

Thousands Cheer Ethiopia Pull-Out

Insurgents Attack Somali Presidential Palace

Somaliland: Voter Registration Successfully Completed

Inside A Pirate Network

Somaliland: U.S. Investor Believes Ethiopia Likely To Break Apart Soon
Somali Pirate's Body Washes Ashore With $153,000
Editorial

Egypt And Piracy

Somaliland Voter Registration: What Is Next?

Features & Commentry

Miss East Africa UK 2008: Contestant Marian Fahen Samatar From Somalia

What A Black President Means To Me
Charity Worker Preparing To Visit War-Torn Sierra Leone

An Open Letter to Martin Luther King

Laying Our Hands On The Problem

By Flying Car From London To Timbuktu

Stop Babysitting Bottomless Somalia

To Reduce Piracy At Sea, Help Somalia On Land
Security Council Expresses Intention To Establish Peacekeeping Mission In Somalia, Subject To Further Decision By 1 June, Unanimously Adopting Resolution 1863

International News

 

History Links King Holiday, Obama Inauguration

Three Million Hit By Windows Worm

Airbus Crashes In New York River

Man Refuses To Drive 'No God' Bus

U.S. Navy Nears Deal with Unidentified Country to Prosecute Somali Pirates

How Birds Can Bring Down A Plane

Opinion

Government Failed To Stop School Children From Chewing Khat

Puntland Parliament Appoints New Pirate President

An Awakening For Somaliland Citizens: Somaliland Voter Registration

Indonesian Troops For Gaza?

Somalia: Talibanistan In East Africa

The Global Crisis Of Capitalism And Its Impact

By Mohamed-Amin Jibril
HARGEISA, January 15 2009 – Improved healthcare facilities have considerably reduced the rate of maternal mortality in Somaliland, but officials say much more still needs to be done.
In 1997, 1,600 out of every 100,000 women giving birth were estimated to die in Somaliland.
Anwar Mohamed Eggeh, Somaliland's director-general in the Ministry of Health and Labour, told IRIN the rate in 2006 was 1,044 per 100,000.
He attributed this to “increasing health facilities in the main towns and remote areas, as well as improvement in living standards. However, the rate is still high, so the Ministry, with the collaboration of UNICEF [the UN Children’s Fund] and EU, is planning to further reduce the rate, establishing new health facilities for the general public.
"There are not enough facilities such as maternal health centres in the country compared to the population, and we want to reduce maternal mortality as we did child mortality, which we reduced by 50 percent,” he added.
Edna Aden Ismail, who set up a maternity and teaching hospital in Hargeisa in 2002, said the facility had contributed to the reduction in maternal deaths.
“We train professional midwives in the hospital, who are now working in the main town hospitals, such as Burou, Lasanod, Borama, Hargeisa Group hospitals,” she told IRIN.
“The other factor is we have enough equipment, professional midwives, nurses and doctors here and the most serious cases are referred to this hospital. Only 32 mothers died in our hospital out of 8,307, and many of them could have been saved if they had arrived at the hospital early enough,” she added.
Antenatal care was still inadequate in Somaliland, according to Ugaso Jama Guled, a midwife and activist fighting female genital mutilation/cutting, which she said was a major contributor to the territory’s high rate of maternal deaths.
She said other factors included pre-eclampsia, hypertension, abortions, pulmonary embolism, ectopic pregnancy and ruptured uteruses.
"Most Somaliland mothers die because of prolonged bleeding, pre-eclampsia, hypertension, infection and malnutrition, caused by lack of a balanced diet," Ugaso said.
Source: IRIN
 



 


 

 


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