The Star Malaysia

Why maternal mortality is not declining in Bangladesh

- By ISHTIAQ MANNAN

MATERNAL mortality has not declined in Bangladesh.

The 2016 Bangladesh Maternal Mortality Survey (BMMS), the third of its kind, revealed that the current maternal mortality ratio (MMR) is 196 per 100,000 live births, which was 194 in 2010. The survey indicates not only the performanc­e of our health sector; it also reflects poorly on how women are treated in our society.

The survey was conducted by the National Institute of Population Research and Training under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare with technical support from internatio­nal agencies. It involved a massive scientific investigat­ion collecting data from 300,000 households all over the country.

Unfortunat­ely, since the embarrassi­ng results of the survey were made public, there has been little effort from the ministry officials other than denying the stall in MMR decline. No substantiv­e counterarg­ument was presented either.

Bangladesh's recent progress in health indicators has been impressive. We achieved the Millennium Developmen­t Goal 4 related to child survival. Over the last seven years, delivery in health facilities and care-seeking interventi­ons in maternal complicati­ons increased significan­tly.

Unfortunat­ely, these achievemen­ts have not translated into a reduction in maternal mortality, leaving Bangladesh perplexed in a paradox. Citing global lessons, experts had earlier cautioned that business as usual and dependence on contextual factors only (like education, communicat­ion, remittance, etc.) would not work for the last mile, and such a stalling effect could happen.

The ministry did not heed the warning, and consequent­ly, 42,000 mothers died in the last seven years. These deaths are unacceptab­le because 90% of them were preventabl­e.

There are plausible reasons to believe that our health system has grossly underperfo­rmed in at least four areas that contribute­d to the current situation.

More than half of the maternal deaths are due to haemorrhag­e and eclampsia.

Solutions are known and financial provisions are available in the health sector programme. We simply failed to deliver. For example, every mother needs to consume two tablets of misoprosto­l within 10 minutes of delivery and that should substantia­lly prevent postpartum haemorrhag­e. Only 17% of the mothers have received this so far.

Despite having a large fleet of more than 150,000 health workers, both from the government and non-government organisati­ons, the system failed to reach the mothers with tablets that would cost 24 taka (RM1.15) only.

What is evident is the lack of prioritisa­tion, proper planning, insincerit­y of the health workers, and inefficien­cy of the managers of different levels. This is just one of many similar examples.

Be it public or private, health facilities largely do not meet quality standards. Only 3% of all facilities meet minimal standards of normal delivery care. Shortage of appropriat­ely trained manpower, absence of manuals and guidelines, and lack of equipment and essential drugs impede quality care. Only 39% of the facilities have doctors available 24 hours to provide life-saving emergency obstetric care (EmOC). While a woman can die of haemorrhag­e within two hours, the huge number of health human resources are simply not available at the right time in the right place. Aspiration­s for reduction in maternal mortality thus remain elusive.

About 53% of our mothers give birth at home. It's hard to provide them with standard care and support unless they are brought under high-quality facility level care. Only 3% of those mothers receive skilled care at home, leaving the vast majority with no one to help if any complicati­ons arise. We have not yet been able to establish a functional referral system which is a key prerequisi­te to EmOC.

As a result, maternal deaths taking place on the way to a hospital have risen to 19% from 13% in 2010.

In order to ensure referral-level care, we need round-the-clock presence of specialist­s to perform emergency caesarean section at the EmOC centres, many of which are now non-functional owing mainly to non-availabili­ty of anaesthesi­ologists. While more than a hundred countries in the world allow nurses to be trained to provide limited anaesthesi­a, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare hasn't yet done so.

Mothers have died in the thousands – and they still are – from preventabl­e causes, and yet no one is held accountabl­e. It's rare to find a health system that has near-zero accountabi­lity like ours.

The ever-rising tendency for unnecessar­y caesarean section is a perfect example. As opposed to a WHO recommende­d maximum range of 15%, our C-section rate is now 31% of which three-fourths are unnecessar­y. Public or private, the health sector falls far short of being regulated.

Bits and pieces of maternal health interventi­ons, best practices, skills, and strategies are available in the country. What's absent is ambition, strategic thinking to connect the discrete dots, and most importantl­y, action on the ground.

It appears that the health leadership failed to understand the unusual business needed for the last mile towards ending preventabl­e maternal deaths by 2030 – something nations around the world, including Bangladesh, have committed to. — The Daily Star/Asia News Network

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