Safety of Expectant Mothers at Risk as Acute Shortage of Midwives Hits the World

In the Hospital Close-up Shot of Professional Midwives work Assisted by Obstetricians. In Modern Delivery Woman Pushes to Give Birth

The world is currently being plaque by a shortage of midwives. According to a new United Nations report, the shortage is around 900,000.

The rampaging COVID-19 pandemic has further exacerbated the situation with many midwives being redeployed to help plug vital gaps in other health services.

The 2021 State of the World’s Midwifery report by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA), World Health Organisation (WHO), and the International Confederation of Midwives, said that fully resourcing midwife-delivered care by 2035 will avert roughly two-thirds of maternal, newborn deaths and stillbirths, saving 4.3 million lives per year.

Executive Director of UNFPA, Natalia Kanem, highlighted the “enormous impact” midwives have on women and their families.

“A capable, well-trained midwife can have an enormous impact on childbearing women and their families – an impact often passed on from one generation to the next.”

“At UNFPA, we have spent more than a decade strengthening education, enhancing working conditions and supporting leadership roles for the midwifery profession. We have seen that these efforts work”, she added.

The report is calling on governments to provide an enabling work environment for midwives, free from gender-related stigma, violence and discrimination.

It also urges greater investment in the education and training of midwives and midwife-led service delivery, and midwifery leadership and governance.

Appointing senior midwives as leaders at country level would provide a significant lever for building capacity, it noted.

Midwives do not just attend births, they also provide antenatal and postnatal care and a range of sexual and reproductive health services, including family planning, detecting and treating sexually transmitted infections, and sexual and reproductive health services for adolescents, all while ensuring respectful care and upholding women’s rights.

As numbers of midwives increase and they are able to provide care in an enabling environment, women’s and newborns’ health improves as a whole, benefitting all of society.

The report’s 2021 edition – the third in the series – noted, however, that despite previous warnings and presenting a roadmap to remedy the deficit, progress has been very slow.

According to latest analysis, at the current rate, the situation would improve “only slightly” by 2030.

Against this background, the report called on governments and stakeholders to “build back better and fairer” from the pandemic, forging stronger primary health-care systems as a pathway to universal health coverage and fostering a more equitable world for all.

WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said “we must learn the lessons the pandemic is teaching us, by implementing policies and making investments that deliver better support and protection for midwives and other health workers.”

Adding, he said “this report provides the data and evidence to support WHO’s longstanding call to strengthen the midwifery workforce, which will deliver a triple dividend in contributing to better health, gender equality and inclusive economic growth.”

Investing in midwives

The launch of the report coincided with the International Day of the Midwife, observed annually on May 5. The Day recognizes the crucial role these essential healthcare professionals have in preventing maternal and newborn deaths and empowering women to make the best choices for themselves and their babies.

This year’s theme is Follow the Data, Invest in Midwives.

President of the International Confederation of Midwives, Franka Cadée, appealed to governments and policymakers to act on the report’s recommendations.

“As autonomous, primary care providers, midwives are continually overlooked and ignored. It’s time for governments to acknowledge the evidence surrounding the life-promoting, life-saving impact of midwife-led care, and take action on the State of the World’s Midwifery report’s recommendations.”

 

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