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Driving safer births

Free bus rides to hospitals and treatments are reducing the risks of childbirth for Nepali women.

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AS a teenager, Meera Nepali was terrified as she went into labour with her first child at home in a remote village, miles from a hospital with nobody but her motherin-law to help.

“I was a scared, but that was the norm. We didn’t have doctors close by,” said Meera of her threeday labour in Khadadevi village in Nepal’s hilly Ramechhap district.

This year however, she delivered her second child in a rural health centre thanks to a small cash incentive that is getting pregnant women to hospital by paying their bus fares.

The Aama Surakshya, or “protection for mothers” programme, has helped more than two million Nepali women access medical services in the impoverish­ed country where dying in childbirth remains a very real risk.

The UN Population Fund says giving birth remains a leading killer of women of reproducti­ve age in Nepal, where the risk of dying in childbirth is higher than anywhere else in South Asia except Afghanista­n.

A huge obstacle to safe deliveries is Nepal’s tough terrain, which often makes getting to a health facility a long and expensive journey, as well as the paucity of clinics in many parts of the country.

“We found that one of the main reasons rural women did not go to a hospital during childbirth was because they did not have hard cash to pay for transporta­tion,” said Suresh Tiwari, one of the original architects of the scheme.

The programme was started in 2005 with British aid money, but has since been taken over by the Nepal government.

Today, it covers not just transport but medical costs for mothers and babies and includes a cash bonus for attending antenatal check-ups.

2017 marked a milestone for the programme – more Nepali women opted for hospital births over home deliveries for the first time on record, official figures show.

“The free service and transport incentive have been very effective in bringing women to health centres and hospitals where they can be saved in case of complicati­ons,” said Tara Nath Pokharel, head of the government’s Family Health Division, which now runs the programme.

Better than dying at home

Meera, one of the beneficiar­ies, paid nothing for her three-day stay at a clinic in Ramechhap district, east of Kathmandu, in January. She was discharged with 1,000 rupees (RM36) for transport plus a 400 rupees (RM15) bonus for attending four antenatal appointmen­ts.

“I returned home in an ambulance. We hardly had to spend anything. I am really grateful for this facility,” Meera said, cradling her young son in her arms.

The scheme is also saving lives outside the maternity wards, in part by tackling cultural obstacles.

Deeply patriarcha­l attitudes and traditiona­l preference­s for home births also see hospital visits dismissed as an unnecessar­y expense for poor families.

Sita Khatri went into labour weeks before her due date and, unable to walk the three hours to the nearest health centre, gave birth to a healthy boy at home.

But the 27-year-old suffered a retained placenta, a painful and potential fatal complicati­on of childbirth, and had to plead with her husband to take her to hospital.

“He said we don’t have money. I insisted, saying there are government facilities, we won’t have to spend too much,” Sita said. “It is better to go the hospital than to die at home.”

Eventually Sita’s husband relented, and she was treated for free at a nearby clinic. The couple were also given 1,000 rupees to pay for transport.

But some women cannot be reached by road and must be carried, while others encounter poorly equipped facilities once they arrive, said Niliza Shakya, a doctor at a health centre in Ramechhap.

“Some women still don’t have the decision-making power to say they want to go to a hospital, and health posts like ours are not equipped enough,” said Shakya.

Nepal managed to reduce maternal mortality by 71% between 1990 and 2015 – just missing out on the Millennium Developmen­t Goal to reduce the rate by three-quarters.

But it has a long way to go in improving the overall quality of its healthcare, said Binjwala Shrestha, a charity worker from the Safe Motherhood Network Federation of Nepal.

“Reaching the hospital alone is not enough,” she said. – AFP

 ??  ?? Pregnant women are paid incentives to attend prenatal check-ups under the Aama Surakshya, or ‘protection for mothers’, programme, as families often cannot afford the costs. — Photos: AFP
Pregnant women are paid incentives to attend prenatal check-ups under the Aama Surakshya, or ‘protection for mothers’, programme, as families often cannot afford the costs. — Photos: AFP
 ??  ?? Nepali mother Pabitra Dhungel gets into an ambulance for her free ride home after delivering her baby at a health centre; it’s a service that has lessened the risks of childbirth for mothers in rural Nepal.
Nepali mother Pabitra Dhungel gets into an ambulance for her free ride home after delivering her baby at a health centre; it’s a service that has lessened the risks of childbirth for mothers in rural Nepal.
 ??  ?? Nepali mother Pabitra Dhungel receiving cash for transporta­tion at a health centre in the Ramechhap district, some 100km east of Kathmandu, so that she is able to access medical services.
Nepali mother Pabitra Dhungel receiving cash for transporta­tion at a health centre in the Ramechhap district, some 100km east of Kathmandu, so that she is able to access medical services.

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