REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH PROGRAM
(EBERT)
Safe Motherhood and Postpartum Care
Improving the
understanding of what works to reduce maternal mortality and improve women's
reproductive health
Preventing
Postpartum Hemorrhage in Gambia
Postpartum hemorrhage
is a leading cause of maternal deaths worldwide. In hospital-based studies,
postpartum oral administration of misoprostol has had similar success in
preventing postpartum hemorrhage to standard injectable treatments.
Misoprostol offers several advantages over these standard regimens,
including oral administration, long shelf life, stability at high
temperature, and low cost. In collaboration with the Medical Research
Council of the U.K., the Council is conducting a community-based, randomized
controlled trial of postpartum administration of misoprostol versus standard
treatment to determine its effect on postpartum hemorrhage in rural Gambia.
This is the first community-based trial to test the impact of this simple
technology on postpartum hemorrhage.
Safe Motherhood
Demonstration Projects on Essential Obstetric Care
Safe motherhood
demonstration projects were conducted in Ghana and Vietnam to determine the
impact of improving essential and emergency obstetric care in settings where
medical care is scarce or quality of care problematic. Among the
interventions tested, the most effective was a brief course on obstetric
life-saving skills given to staff at primary (clinics) and secondary
(district hospitals) care facilities. This intensive competency-based course
increased the detection of life threatening obstetric conditions at both
clinics and hospitals, but only improved the clinical management of these
conditions in hospitals.
The First-Time
Parents Project
First births
frequently occur to married adolescents. In Bangladesh, for example, nearly
75 percent of married women were under age 20 at the time of their first
birth. Though fertility is falling in most of the developing world (and high
parity births, with their attendant risks, are declining), age at marriage
and first birth remains low in many countries. Very young first-time mothers
are at higher risk of pregnancy and birth complications, particularly
obstructed labor, than women aged 20 to 35. First births are a potentially
unique and powerful entry point into improving the prospects, including
their reproductive and sexual health, of young, first-time mothers, and in
setting patterns for future health seeking behavior.
The First-Time Parents
Project is being conducted to better understand the social moment and
transition of a first birth, including the critical role of partners/fathers
and other family members in decision-making and supportive/detrimental
behaviors, so as to develop and test interventions that increase young
women's social support; and tailor pregnancy, birth, and postpartum services
to reflect this reality and be more broadly responsive to the reproductive
and sexual health needs of women/girls having a first child.
Improving the
Quality of Maternal Care
A project to improve
approaches to providing quality maternal care in Kenya was conducted in
conjunction with the Ministry of Health, the University of Nairobi, the
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Kenya Medical Training College,
and decentralized training centers. The goal of the project was to develop
and implement a safe motherhood program model that can be applied to the
majority of the country to reduce maternal and perinatal morbidity and
mortality.
This model, including
interventions to improve access to and quality of health care from the
grassroots level to hospitals, is being developed for two districts with
distinct but typical health service structures. The feasibility,
acceptability, quality, and effectiveness of alternative approaches was
implemented, monitored and evaluated through defined process indicators.
Supporting Fathers
in Turkey
The Population Council supported an education
project to provide expectant fathers in ten large factories in Istanbul with
information and support to promote family health during the pregnancy,
birth, and newborn periods. This program is build on earlier research that
demonstrated that providing information before a birth about pregnancy,
childbirth, infant health, and postpartum women's health (including family
planning), positively affected health behaviors after the birth, and more so
if expectant fathers were also involved.
See Also
Return to
Ebert Safe Motherhood and Postpartum Care main page.
This page updated on
19 October, 2007