Philippine Daily Inquirer

A perilous journey for women and mothers

- NATASHA REYES

Women who are forced from their homes are particular­ly vulnerable. They have specific health needs that are exacerbate­d when they are displaced; women on the move lose access to health care. They may fall pregnant and give birth, and are at risk of complicati­ons that can be fatal.

I witnessed this in 2017 when I first started working among the Rohingya women as part of an emergency team of Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)/Doctors Without Borders. We were deployed across Cox’s Bazar district in Bangladesh to respond to the unpreceden­ted exodus of around 700,000 Rohingya refugees fleeing persecutio­n in neighborin­g Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

For my three-week emergency mission, I was tasked to assess the needs of the newly arrived refugees. Sexual, reproducti­ve and maternal health care were desperatel­y needed at that time.

I returned to Bangladesh in March this year as head of mission, three months after MSF had marked the provision of one million consultati­ons to refugee and host community population­s in Cox’s Bazar. This number is not to be celebrated, however. If anything, it revealed what more needs to be done, and what problems persist. Steep slippery paths to safe delivery. A discovery that particular­ly struck me was the small number of consultati­ons MSF provided for maternal deliveries and antenatal care. Our teams were only able to assist 2,192 births in one year, While antenatal consultati­ons made up only 3.36 percent (35,392) of our total consultati­ons.

This shows that most pregnant women

in the refugee camp deliver their babies at home. They do so with the help of traditiona­l birth attendants, which is not necessaril­y a problem in itself. However, conditions in their homes are precarious for childbirth. They live in makeshift houses made of loosely woven bamboo with dirt floors in an overcrowde­d camp. Water has to be brought in from sources outside the home, sometimes requiring a long walk. Toilet facilities are also communal. Such conditions can pose health risks for the mother and child, aside from other possible complicati­ons that can arise from childbirth.

Complicate­d deliveries can be difficult to manage, because women have to make their own way to a health structure. A woman in labor will probably have to be carried over slippery and hilly trails, usually on a chair slung between two poles, to the nearest health facility, which can be at a considerab­le distance. It is trickier at night when the paths are not lit, and the woman may have to wait until daybreak. It can take hours before she arrives at a health structure, putting her life and that of her baby at risk.

MSF teams work in the community to inform women and their families of the availabili­ty and importance of free quality maternity services. This is done in order to encourage women to access reproducti­ve health care. We also make sure that our services facilitate their safe delivery with privacy and dignity, or their transfer to more specialize­d structures when they require advanced care.

No long-term solution in sight. Before I knew it, my stint as head of mission was over. I leave knowing that the work is far from finished. The refugees will be there for the foreseeabl­e future, and we will have to continue caring for them to restore as much of their dignity as we can.

A personal challenge for me is to directly witness the situation of the Rohingya in Bangladesh and see no resolution to their suffering. They are caught between a rock and a hard place—living in suboptimal conditions in Bangladesh and unable to go home to Rakhine, Myanmar, because they do not feel safe there. It is a complex problem that requires a political solution. It can be dishearten­ing to support a population in distress whose main problem you cannot fix.

What stands out to me leaving Bangladesh is the strength of the Rohingya people in the camps. I am reminded that we must continue to highlight their situation, so that the world does not forget that there are almost 1 million human beings stuck in limbo in the hills of Cox’s Bazar.

———— Dr. Natasha Reyes is currently the director of the operations support unit of Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)/Doctors Without Borders-Hong Kong. She has been with MSF since 2007 as a field doctor for emergency and unstable contexts. Her assignment­s have included Kenya, India, South Sudan, Pakistan, Afghanista­n, Libya, Colombia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Nepal and the Philippine­s.

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