Title: Maternal Mortality in Bangladesh
1Maternal Mortality in Bangladesh
- Learning From The Past, Moving Towards The Future
- Özge Tunçalp, MD MPH
- Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
April 30th, 2009 Istanbul, Turkey
2OUTLINE
- Background
- Methods
- Unraveling The Decline in Mortality
- Where Do We Go From Here?
3Background
- MDG-5
- Delivery at home universal (90)
- TBA attended birth (75)
- Postpartum hemorrhage leading cause
- YET
- Declining trends in maternal mortality
- National data BMMS-2001
- Matlab data - 2005
4Projection of MMR in Bangladesh 1976-2015
Per 1,000 live births
Projected declining rate 3.2 annually
Required declining rate 5.1 annually
(Koblinsky, 2008)
5Methods
- Key-informant interviews in Bangladesh
- Government, international and non-governmental
organization officials and researchers - Government reports and documents
- Agency reports and unpublished drafts
- Facility observation
6Unraveling The Decline in Maternal Mortality
7Government services are meant to be free, but
shortages of supplies and staff make only certain
parts free.
- Rich get better services at government services.
Its human psychology.
Quotes from government officials
8Government Programs
- STRENGTHS
- Political Commitment
- Sector-wide approach
- Government-owned, donor-funded, internationally
assisted programs - Facility-based initiatives
- Maternal Vouchers
- Menstrual Regulation and Family Planning
- WEAKNESSES
- Discrepancy between urban vs. rural
- Coverage of the population
- Cost main deterrent
- No real monitoring over private sector
- Lack of evaluation
- Political situation()
9TBAs are not literate, but accepted in the
community. Doctors are knowledgeable and can
manage problems, but their availability is hard
to find, and they are facility-based, they dont
go to the community. We need somebody in between
with both plusses. In this case, it is community
skilled birth attendants for Bangladesh.
A practicing ob/gyn and a consultant on safe
motherhood
- Absenteeism is a big problem in government
clinics. - Officer at an international
organization -
10Skilled Attendance at Birth
- Community-Based
- Traditional Birth Attendants
- Skilled Birth Attendants
- Future Integration of SBAs to the facility care
- Facility-Based
- Capacity building for health care staff
- Lack of anesthesiologists
- Private practice
- Urban vs. rural
11Bangladesh is mobilized and on the move.
Officer from an international
organization
- Maternal mortality has not declined because of
better facilities or better staff. It has
decreased because of the social development.
Unless people come and participate, facilities
cannot do much. - Member of National Consultant Professional
Organization
12Social Development
- Right now
- Education (scholarships)
- Decreasing TFR
- Delayed marriage and childbirth
- Communication Infrastructure (cell phones, media,
roads) - Microcredit and womens empowerment
- Whats missing?
- Very hard to differentiate the effects
- Harder to study
- An amalgam?
13In Summary
Skilled Attendance at Birth (Community /
Facility)
Social Development
Staffing
SBA
- Education
- Delayed marriage,
- and childbirth
- Infrastructure
- Communication
- Increasing GDP
- Decreased TFR
- Microcredit
Deciding to Seek Care
Reaching the Medical Facility
Receiving adequate care
Infrastructure and Capacity Building
Maternal Voucher
Government Programs
Family Planning Menstrual Regulation
14Where Do We Go From Here?
15Community Based Misoprostol
- FOR
- PPH 1 killer
- Delivery practices
- Proven in other resource-poor settings
- User-friendly
- Studies in Bangladesh
- AGAINST
- Possible adverse effects
- Slow update on already existing protocols
- Mixed messages
16Considering the home delivery to be the
universal norm, the majority of deliveries being
assisted by traditional birth attendants in
resource-poor areas, and womens lack of
decision-making power for their health makes the
community-based misoprostol intervention both an
effective and empowering strategy in improving
womens lives in Bangladesh.
RECOMMENDATION
17Intrapartum Health Center Care
- FOR
- Not-so-successful previous strategies
- Cost-effectiveness analysis in Bangladesh
- SBAs are not sufficient
- AGAINST
- Too many rural births
- (3,2 million/year)
- Lack of infrastructure
- Lack of staff
- Cultural preferences
18The ongoing improvements in the healthcare
infrastructure and capacity building for health
care professionals are promising steps toward a
facility based intrapartum care strategy. However
in the short term, switching the policies and the
programs completely is not feasible.
RECOMMENDATION
19THANK YOU!otuncalp_at_jhsph.edu
- Bangladesh
- Marge Koblinsky
- ICDDR,B RH Unit
- JHSPH
- Michael Koenig
- Michelle Hindin
- Ron Gray
Funded by Global Field Experience Award
20MDG-5 Updated