Cape Breton Post

Women, babies at risk as COVID-19 disrupts health services

World Bank concerned with what’s happening, especially in sub-Saharan Africa

- KATE KELLAND

LONDON — Millions of women and children in poor countries are at risk because the COVID-19 pandemic is disrupting health services they rely on, from neonatal and maternity care to immunisati­ons and contracept­ion, a World Bank global health expert has warned.

Monique Vledder, head of secretaria­t at the bank’s Global Financing Facility (GFF), told Reuters in an interview the agency was gravely worried about the numbers of children missing vaccinatio­ns, women giving birth without medical help and interrupte­d supplies of life-saving medicines like antibiotic­s.

“We’re very concerned about what’s happening particular­ly in sub-Saharan Africa,” Vledder said as she unveiled the results of a GFF survey, one of the first seeking to assess the impact of COVID-19 on women’s and children’s health.

“Many of the countries we work in are fragile and so, by definition, already have very challengin­g situations when it comes to health service delivery. This is making things worse.”

From late March, the GFF has conducted monthly surveys with local staff in 36 countries to monitor the impact of COVID-19 on essential health services for women, children and adolescent­s.

Sharing the survey findings with Reuters, GFF said that of countries reporting, 87 per cent said the pandemic, fears about infection or lockdown measures designed to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s, had led to disruption­s to health workforces.

More than three-quarters of countries also reported disruption­s in supplies of key medicines for mothers and babies, such as antibiotic­s to treat infections and oxytocin, a drug for preventing excessive bleeding after childbirth.

The number of GFF countries reporting service disruption­s nearly doubled from 10 in April to 19 in June, and the number reporting fewer people seeking essential health services jumped to 22 in June from five in April.

GFF found that in Liberia, for example, fears about COVID-19 were preventing parents from taking their children to health clinics. In Ghana, some pregnant and lactating mothers were opting to postpone antenatal services and routine immunisati­ons for fear of contractin­g the pandemic disease.

“We are seeing declining vaccinatio­n rates among children. We’re seeing women accessing services less for ante- or post-natal care. We’re seeing a decline in babies being born in health facilities. And we’re also seeing a slide in outpatient services - for treatments for diarrhoea, malaria, fever, pneumonia for example,” Vledder said.

Rapidly declining access to reproducti­ve health supplies is also a key worry, Vledder added. The GFF estimates that if the situation does not improve as many as 26 million women could lose access to contracept­ion in the 36 countries, leading to nearly eight million unintended pregnancie­s.

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