Daily Press (Sunday)

Celebrate progress for mothers, children on Mother’s Day

- By Chelsea Follett Guest Columnist Chelsea Follett is the managing editor of HumanProgr­ess.org and a policy analyst in the Cato Institute’s Center for Global Liberty & Prosperity.

Few know the story of the woman who inspired Mother’s Day. Her name was Ann Jarvis, and the many tragedies in her life demonstrat­e how much more difficult motherhood was in the past and the progress that has been made since.

Jarvis was born in 1832 in Virginia and married at age 18. After marrying, she had 13 children over the course of 17 years. In that era, prenatal care was almost nonexisten­t. During the 19th century, about 500 to 1,000 mothers died for every 100,000 births. Giving birth 13 times, as Jarvis did, meant that she faced between a 6% and 13% chance of death. Fortunatel­y, she survived. Today, the maternal mortality rate, while still higher in poor countries than in rich ones, is falling — decreasing from 342 deaths per 100,000 live births in the year 2000 to 211 per 100,000 in 2017, the World Bank’s most recent year of data.

Children also faced fearful survival odds and were often killed by childhood ailments that are now preventabl­e or treatable. Jarvis’s family was no exception: only four of her children lived to adulthood. Her children died of illnesses such as measles, typhoid and diphtheria, which are now far less common thanks to vaccines and better sanitation.

The grief of losing nine children is beyond the imaginatio­n of most people today. Jarvis faced better odds than her foremother­s in this regard, although she fared worse than the statistica­l average. The average number of a mother’s children lost to premature death had fallen from three in 1800 to just two in 1850, the year that Jarvis wed. That figure fell to one child in 1900.

Today, thankfully, childhood death is extraordin­arily rare in developed countries, where most mothers can expect to see all of their children survive. That progress is ongoing, and has come about thanks to medical advances, improved sanitation and rising prosperity to fund them — as well as the efforts of people such as Jarvis.

In 1858, while she was pregnant with her sixth child, Jarvis began organizing women’s clubs with the goal of reducing childhood death. The clubs raised funds to buy medicine for local children, hired assistants for mothers suffering from tuberculos­is, brought supplies to sick quarantini­ng households to prevent the spread of disease, and more. “The clubs inspected food and milk for contaminat­ion — long before government­s took on such tasks — and they visited homes to teach mothers how to improve sanitation. Ann became a popular speaker, addressing subjects (such as) ‘Great Value of Hygiene for Women and Children.’ ”

Jarvis helped popularize the practice of boiling drinking water in her community, preventing cases of the often-deadly waterborne illnesses (such as tuberculos­is and typhoid fever) that ravaged humanity before widespread chlorinati­on.

Despite the demands of childreari­ng and her volunteer work on behalf of mothers and children, Jarvis also found time to organize efforts during the Civil War to treat wounded soldiers from both sides. A devout Methodist, Jarvis was also active in her religious community and taught Sunday School lessons.

Anna, one of Jarvis’s four children to make it to adulthood, created Mother’s Day in Ann’s honor. She was inspired by something Jarvis had said during Sunday School: “I hope and pray that someone, sometime, will found a memorial ‘mother’s day’ commemorat­ing her for the matchless service she renders to humanity in every field of life. She is entitled to it.”

Given her tireless work to improve maternal and childhood health, Ann Jarvis certainly deserves credit. This Mother’s Day, despite the problems that remain, take a moment to appreciate progress in the fight against premature death for mothers and their children.

 ?? GETTY ?? Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church is considered the “mother church” of Mother’s Day. Anna Jarvis led the movement to recognize the holiday, holding the first ceremony at the Grafton, West Virginia, church in 1908. Decades later, in 1962, the church was incorporat­ed as the Internatio­nal Mother’s Day Shrine, meant as a shrine to all mothers. It celebrates a Mother’s Day service annually.
GETTY Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church is considered the “mother church” of Mother’s Day. Anna Jarvis led the movement to recognize the holiday, holding the first ceremony at the Grafton, West Virginia, church in 1908. Decades later, in 1962, the church was incorporat­ed as the Internatio­nal Mother’s Day Shrine, meant as a shrine to all mothers. It celebrates a Mother’s Day service annually.

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