The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria lost about 57,000 mothers in 2023, says FG

- From Nkechi Onyedika- Ugoeze ( Abuja) and Musa Adekunle

FEDERAL Government has revealed that nearly 57,000 mothers died in 2023 from pregnancy and childbirth complicati­ons.

Coordinati­ng Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Muhammad Pate, made the disclosure in a statement, yesterday, via his official X account to commemorat­e the National Safe Motherhood Day.

Pate, in the text, emphasised the importance of honouring the lives of mothers in the country by intensifyi­ng efforts to prevent maternal deaths.

The minister said this year’s

Safe Motherhood Day calls to action, reaffirmin­g dedication to end the loss of life due to maternal causes.

“This year’s National Safe Motherhood Day is more than a celebratio­n; it’s a call to action. We remember the almost 57,000 women, who lost their lives to maternal causes in the last year and reaffirm our commitment to reducing these numbers to through improved primary care and community engagement.

“The administra­tion of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is committed to putting the Nigerian people at the centre of all initiative­s, ensuring that every policy and investment improves the well- being of our citizens. Central to this agenda is enhancing healthcare access and outcomes, particular­ly for mothers and newborns.”

EARLIER, FG, at an event, which commemorat­ed National Safe Motherhood Day, the Federal Government unveiled a new Safe Motherhood Strategy to accelerate the reduction of maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality by ensuring that no woman dies from pregnancy and childbirth related conditions and that every newborn is protected and assisted to thrive into healthy childhood.

It also launched the guidelines for the management of Postpartum hemorrhage ( PPH) in community and health facilities; Labour Care Guide, and Guidelines for Community Use of Misoprosto­l.

Under the new guidelines, government will adopt a sector wide approach through the Decentrali­sed Facility Financing ( DFF) package, targeting no fewer than seven million pregnant women, and six million new births yearly. Speaking at the launch of the documents, yesterday, in Abuja, Pate, lamented that many lives are still lost to preventabl­e complicati­ons during pregnancy and childbirth in the country.

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