A recent New York Times article, Maternal Deaths in Sharp Decline Across the Globe, has sparked reactions ranging from congratulations to notes of caution that the work is not done yet.
Dorothy Balaba Byansi of PSI’s Uganda affiliate PACE, shared her thoughts:
“To the Editor:
Your article about the Lancet report on declining maternal mortality brought me so much joy. I work for a Ugandan N.G.O., PACE, where we manage a network of 100 partly franchised clinics, and I’m accustomed to grim stories of “little progress,” even after loads of hard work to ensure that women in Uganda have better access to lifesaving services and products. It is therefore encouraging that the efforts health workers put in across the world are bearing fruit.
In Uganda, though there remains a long mile to walk, we are making progress, too. In 2009, PACE’s partnership with the Ministry of Health enabled 13,686 women to receive long-term family planning methods, up from 255 the previous year. We also distributed 12,420 clean delivery kits and 17,926 Misoprostol doses for the prevention of post-partum hemorrhage, which accounts for one-third of maternal deaths in most parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
Dorothy Balaba Byansi
Kampala, Uganda, April 14, 2010