The
Birth of Safe Motherhood
In the last 20 years, the issue of safe motherhood has evolved from a neglected
issue to an essential and integrated element of the women’s health agenda.
The event that set this change in motion was a landmark worldwide movement launched
in 1987—the Safe Motherhood Initiative.
Launched
at the global Safe Motherhood
Conference in Nairobi, Kenya,
the Initiative sought to address
the near-silent tragedy of
women dying during pregnancy
and childbirth. It issued an
international call to action
to cut maternal mortality in
half by
the year 2000 and led to the
formation of an Inter-Agency
Group (IAG) for Safe Motherhood.*
A
New Way of Seeing
The
Safe Motherhood Conference
marked a turning point. For
the first time ever, the international
development community focused
on the plight of women dying
in pregnancy and childbirth.
Finally, maternal health was
situated as part of a continuum
of improvement of women’s
status in the economic, social,
and political spheres.
Largely
as a result of the initiative
and the political momentum
it generated, safe
motherhood became a central
component of program and policies
focusing on women’s
health and rights. At
the International Conference
on Population and Development
(ICPD) in 1994, maternal mortality
was identified as a core component
of women’s
sexual and reproductive health.
At the Millennium Development
Goal (MDG) Summit in 2000,
safe motherhood was situated
within the broader context
of poverty reduction efforts
and overall development efforts,
and with MDG 5, maternal health
was recognized as a key development
goal.
In
2005, the Partnership
for Maternal, Newborn, & Child
Health was
launched as a larger, broader
successor to the Safe Motherhood
Inter-Agency Group.
Moving
Forward
Today,
thanks to the Safe Motherhood
Initiative and the work it
has inspired, we know what
works and what doesn’t.
We now understand how to save
women’s
lives. But
though we have found a way,
we are lacking the will—and
the maternal mortality ratio
remains intolerably high.
Marking
twenty years of the Safe Motherhood
Initiative, WOMEN DELIVER will
bring together all sectors—education,
health, development, equity,
human rights, poverty reduction,
and micro-finance. We will
aim to bridge the borders that
have separated us and find
ways to create the political
will to save women and children—and
invest in their lives so that
they may survive
and thrive.
By doing that, we fulfill the
promise made in Nairobi, Kenya
to the world’s
women, mothers, and children.
*
The Inter-Agency Group
for Safe Motherhood included:
United Nations Children’s
Fund, United Nations Population
Fund, World Health Organization,
World Bank, International
Planned Parenthood Federation,
The Population Council,
International Federation
of Gynecology and Obstetrics,
International Confederation
of Midwives, Safe Motherhood
Network of Nepal, Regional
Prevention of Maternal
Mortality Programme (Africa).
Family Care International
served as the secretariat. |