India’s progress towards the Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 on infant and maternal mortality

2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanimi Reddy ◽  
ManasR Pradhan ◽  
Rohini Ghosh ◽  
AG Khan
2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-152
Author(s):  
You Ari Faeni ◽  
Adina Astasia

Tingkat kasus kematian Ibu di Indonesia masih tergolong tinggi. Berdasarkan evaluasi Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) pada tahun 2015, kasus kematian ibu di Indonesia masih pada posisi 305 per 100.000 kelahiran. Padahal target yang dicanangkan Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa (PBB) adalah 102 per 100.000 kelahiran dan target SDG’s tahun 2030 adalah 70 kematian per 100.000 kelahiran. Sebenarnya Skilled care before, during and after childbirth can save the lives of women. Paper ini bertujuan untuk mengidentifikasi risiko kematian ibu di Indonesia melalui indikator kesehatan ibu yang merupakan penjabaran dari skilled care before, during and after childbirth, kemudian mengelompokkan wilayah berdasarkan indikator tersebut. Variabel-variabel yang ada direduksi menggunakan analisis komponen utama untuk memastikan variabel-variabel bersifat orthogonal dan disajikan dalam bentuk biplot dan cluster untuk mempermudah interpretasi. Hasil analisis gabungan antara biplot dan cluster menunjukkan bahwa cluster pertama memiliki risiko kematian ibu terendah, cluster kedua memiliki risiko kematian ibu sedang, sementara cluster ketiga memiliki risiko kematian ibu tertinggi. Provinsi-provinsi pada klaster ketiga membutuhkan perhatian lebih karena memiliki risiko kematian ibu tertinggi akibat kurang adanya pengawasan oleh tenaga kesehatan saat kehamilan, saat melahirkan, dan setelah melahirkan.


Subject Progress in ending Maternal Mortality Rates globally. Significance The global rate of maternal deaths since 1990 has dropped significantly. However, with the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) expiring this year, only 16 countries are on track to achieve MDG 5: to reduce the maternal mortality rate (MMR) by 75%. Reduction rates in developing countries have also slowed, while rates in the developed world are rising. Such uneven progress in maternal health suggests that the current models for public health provision are inadequate. Impacts The economies of countries with high MMR are disrupted by the significant loss of productive young women. The loss of the mother stilts the development of surviving children, perpetuating cycles of poverty. Health systems that fail to provide maternity care will also be profoundly crippled in their capacity to serve the wider population.


2008 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Tukur ◽  
Ta Jido ◽  
Bs Awolaja

We presented a study of maternal mortality over a 4-year period in a tertiary health facility in northern Nigeria. Increased effort is needed in order to meet the millennium development goals.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 174550652110670
Author(s):  
Asnakew Achaw Ayele ◽  
Yonas Getaye Tefera ◽  
Leah East

Maternal mortality reduction has been recognized as a key healthcare problem that requires prioritizing in addressing. In 2015, the United Nations has set Sustainable Development Goals to reduce global maternal mortality ratio to 70 per 100,000 live births by 2030. Ethiopia as a member country has been working to achieve this Sustainable Development Goals target for the last decades. In this article, we discussed Ethiopia’s commitment towards achieving Sustainable Development Goals in maternal mortality. Furthermore, the trends of maternal mortality rate in Ethiopia during Millennium Development Goals and Sustainable Development Goals are also highlighted. Although maternal mortality has been declining in Ethiopia from 2000 to 2016, the rate of death is still unacceptably high. This requires many efforts now and in future to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals target by 2030.


2018 ◽  
pp. 43-60
Author(s):  
Renee Sharma ◽  
Jai K. Das ◽  
Zulfiqar A. Bhutta

The United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) adopted by world leaders in 2000 aimed to address some of the most pressing global issues of our times: extreme poverty, unequal health, and inequities in development. The MDGs, a set of interrelated targets to be met by 2015, catalyzed political commitment toward improving child survival and maternal health. Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 called for a two-thirds reduction in the younger-than-5 child mortality rate and a three-quarters reduction in the maternal mortality ratio, respectively, from 1990 base figures.1 Although concerted global efforts have led to substantial reductions in maternal and child mortality over the past 25 years, MDG 4 and 5 targets have not been fully realized. Only 62 of the 195 countries with available estimates achieved the MDG 4 target, of which 24 were low-income and lower-middle–income countries.2 Only 2 regions, East Asia and the Pacific (69% reduction) and Latin America and the Caribbean (67% reduction), met the target at a regional level.2 For MDG 5, of the 95 countries that had a maternal mortality ratio of more than 100 in 1990, only 9 achieved the target for reduction in maternal mortality: Bhutan, Cambodia, Cape Verde, Iran, Laos, Maldives, Mongolia, Rwanda, and Timor-Leste.3 As we celebrate the fact that the global younger-than-5 mortality rate and maternal mortality ratio have fallen by 53% and 43.9%, respectively, since 1990, we also face the sobering reality that high numbers of women and children are still dying every year, largely due to conditions that could have been prevented or treated if existing cost-effective interventions were universally available.2–4 The burden of mortality also remains unevenly distributed, with the largest numbers and highest rates of maternal and younger-than-5 deaths concentrated in countries of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, especially in lower-income countries and among fragile states, especially those with ongoing conflict.2,3,5 2015 marked the end of the MDG era and the beginning of a new global framework, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This new framework presents an opportunity to leverage the momentum built over recent decades to tackle global inequities in maternal and child health. Of these SDGs, goal 3 also calls for an end to preventable deaths of newborns and children younger than 5 years, as well as a reduction in maternal mortality to less than 70 per 100,000 live births, by 2030.6 Achieving this target would require overcoming barriers and inequities in access to quality health services and, thus, implementing strategies to reach all mothers and children, including those who are most vulnerable, remote, and at risk. In this chapter, we discuss the current burden of younger-than-5 and maternal mortality, barriers contributing to health inequities, and, finally, evidence-based strategies to bridge these gaps.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Rosen ◽  
Isabelle de Zoysa ◽  
Karl Dehne ◽  
Viviana Mangiaterra ◽  
Quarraisha Abdool-Karim

The impact of HIV on maternal mortality and more broadly on the health of women, remains poorly documented and understood. Two recent reports attempt to address the conceptual and methodological challenges that arise in estimating HIV-related maternal mortality and trends. This paper presents and compares the methods and discusses how they affect estimates at global and regional levels. Country examples of likely patterns of mortality among women of reproductive age are provided to illustrate the critical interactions between HIV and complications of pregnancy in high-HIV-burden countries. The implications for collaboration between HIV and reproductive health programmes are discussed, in support of accelerated action to reach the Millennium Development Goals and improve the health of women.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tedi Sudrajat ◽  
Agus Mardianto

Design of services and health protection for mothers and children in Banyumas directed by a strategic policy to reducing Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR) and Infant Mortality Rate (IMR). In its implementation, especially in Maternal Mortality, the policies were still exceeded the target of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). In the term of legal protection, the policy not mention the sanction and it’s influence the implementation that not optimal. But if there are omissions or errors that indicated malpractice will be subject by criminal, civil, administrative and ethics sanctions.                                                                                      Key words: health service, legal protection, maternal and child health 


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document