Maternal Health in India: Emerging Priorities (New Delhi, Boston, Washington, DC)
Maternal mortality causes , accounting for 20 percent of maternal deaths around the world, said John Townsend, vice president and director of the 鈥檚 reproductive health program. It is a key battleground for maternal health advocates. But maternal health is sometimes eclipsed by other major health and development issues on the sub-continent. For example, nearly five times as many people and live on less than $1.25 a day.
Townsend was joined at the 乐鱼 体育 on April 4 via videoconference by participants in New Delhi and from Harvard University鈥檚 School of Public Health to discuss key challenges to improving maternal health in India as part of the Global Health Initiative鈥檚 Advancing Dialogue on Maternal Health series. The public event was preceded by a day-long workshop in New Delhi with 70 leading development practitioners, senior government officials, and a wide range of donors and media representatives who came together to participate in roundtable discussions identifying future priorities.
A Holistic Approach
Poonam Muttreja, executive director of the , which co-convened the India workshop, said that one of the key points participants in New Delhi agreed on was the need for increased attention on maternal morbidity in addition to maternal mortality.
While maternal deaths fell from live births in just 10 years (though still well above the developed-country average of ), Muttreja said that 鈥渇or every woman dying in childbirth about 20 suffer long-lasting and debilitating illnesses.鈥 For many of these women, 鈥渓ife is a living death.鈥
One way to address this gap is to 鈥減romote a life cycle approach鈥 to care instead of addressing specific components, like family planning, maternal health, and reproductive and sexual health, separately.
Leela Visaria, honorary professor at the , agreed: 鈥淚n practice, what it means is offering women a broad set of family planning and reproductive health services and maternal health services at the same delivery site and by the same provider,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think we all know this, and yet we have not been able to achieve this.鈥
One gap that needs to be addressed is sexual health and health education, she said. Sexual health programs, especially ones targeting adolescents, are 鈥渁lmost nonexistent.鈥
Visaria also emphasized the importance of family planning as part of maternal health. Contraception can help women space births further apart, leading to healthier pregnancies, healthier mothers, and healthier children, she said.
Addressing the gaps in care after childbirth could also significantly reduce morbidity. Few women have access to postpartum care, especially in the north of the country, said Visaria. Abhay Bang, director of the , noted that 43 percent of rural women suffer from some kind of postpartum morbidity and that home-based care through accredited social health activists could significantly reduce these numbers.
The Indian government has recognized the need for integrated healthcare throughout women鈥檚 lives, and has set up a coalition to deal with in a more holistic manner, said Muttreja.
Social Determinants of Care
鈥淢aternal health will not be improved to its full potential by focusing on maternal health alone,鈥 Bang said, quoting the produced at in Arusha, Tanzania. 鈥淭hat is precisely where social determinants come in.鈥
In India, he said, early marriage traditions have serious negative impacts on maternal health as girls are more likely to become pregnant at younger 鈥 and riskier 鈥 ages. He also noted that women have generally low status in traditional Indian families, leading to poor nutrition: 36 percent of Indian women are malnourished and 55 percent are anemic.
Women who are born into the lower castes or tribal women are especially likely to lack access to healthcare. 鈥淭hese are the last people that are served, these are the last people who have access to care,鈥 said Townsend, 鈥渁nd this inequity will be a problem鈥or every element of society.鈥
Joining the event from Boston, Mary Nell Wegner of the , focused on ways to 鈥渃hange the odds鈥 for these underserved women. An integrated approach could help address their multiple needs by reducing the number of points of contact they have to make in order to receive care, she suggested. The complexity of social determinants of health can make reaching these women difficult, but organizations should figure out how to build trust and interact with those who generally spend little time in health-care institutions.
Dr. H Sudarshan, of the , pointed to another social factor. The 鈥済reatest problem today in the health care service is the in the system,鈥 he said from New Delhi. For example, although anemia is a major problem throughout India, during one two-year period some states didn鈥檛 have any iron tablets to distribute to women. Transparency within hospital administrations and community monitoring schemes could help curb this graft, he said, mentioning that there are pilot programs in nine states that have helped.
As evidenced by the great progress made in the last decade, the government has taken community monitoring seriously, said Muttreja. She pointed out that the has made this a particular focus, but noted that equally important as improving oversight is making communities more aware of the rights and the services to which they鈥檙e entitled.
The Post-2015 Development Agenda
Bang pointed out that there is great potential in home-based care, including prenatal, delivery, postpartum, and newborn care. Reaching out to women at home 鈥 provided the quality of service remains acceptable 鈥 can improve access to care, especially for women who tend to fall through the cracks. He also said that India needs to focus on gender issues outside maternal health, like girl鈥檚 education, violence against women, mental health, and sensitizing men.
From New Delhi to Boston and Washington, DC, all the panelists emphasized the need to continue to focus on maternal health in the (when the Millennium Development Goals are set to expire), especially within the greater framework of integrated health care. They also said that quality of care is an important priority: a system of accreditation for facilities and services should be introduced alongside guidelines, protocols, and checklists to promote best practices.
Maternal health is a 鈥渟ound investment strategy鈥 for development, Townsend said, but part of the challenge is communicating the benefits. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we should be timid,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we want women and maternal health to be central on the development agenda, we have to speak with a strong and vibrant voice.鈥
Drafted by Carolyn Lamere, edited by Schuyler Null and Sandeep Bathala
Speakers

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Maternal Health Initiative
Housed within the 乐鱼 体育's Environmental Change and Security Program, the Maternal Health Initiative (MHI) leads the 乐鱼 体育鈥檚 work on maternal health, global health equity, and gender equality. Read more
Environmental Change and Security Program
The Environmental Change and Security Program (ECSP) explores the connections between environmental change, health, and population dynamics and their links to conflict, human insecurity, and foreign policy. Read more
Indo-Pacific Program
The Indo-Pacific Program promotes policy debate and intellectual discussions on US interests in the Asia-Pacific as well as political, economic, security, and social issues relating to the world鈥檚 most populous and economically dynamic region. Read more