Midwives : health heroes for women, adolescent girls and newborns
5 May 2016
International Day of
the Midwife 2016
Statement by Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, Executive
Director, UNFPA, The United Nations Population Fund
5 May 2016
On this International Day of the Midwife, UNFPA, the United Nations
Population Fund, salutes the contribution of midwives to saving the lives of
women, adolescent girls and newborns, sometimes under very difficult
circumstances, in hard-to-reach communities, in humanitarian emergencies, and
in fragile and conflict-torn countries.
Well-trained and supported midwives working in communities are uniquely
positioned to provide the compassionate, respectful and culturally sensitive
care a woman needs during pregnancy and childbirth. Midwifery is equally
important for newborns during the critical first month of life, and is a
significant contribution to sexual and reproductive health in general.
Midwives are, therefore, essential to achieving the Sustainable Development
Goals. In the past 25 years, the world has almost halved maternal deaths, but
every year, some 300,000 women still die during pregnancy and childbirth, and
almost 3 million babies do not survive their first four weeks of life. A vast
majority of these largely preventable deaths take place in developing and
crisis-affected countries. If deployed in larger numbers, trained midwives
could avert approximately two thirds of these deaths. Significant investments
in midwifery are essential if the world is to achieve its ambitious goals of
reducing maternal and newborn deaths.
UNFPA is helping train and support thousands of midwives in more than 100 countries.
A recent survey estimated that in 57 of these countries, UNFPA has trained
66,000 midwives over the past seven years. These critical health-care providers
can help more than 11 million women to give birth safely each year, but much
more needs to be done.
On this International Day of the Midwife, we at UNFPA renew our commitment
to working with global partners and countries to strengthen midwifery skills
and capacities. We call on countries to acclaim and reward midwives who are
working in challenging and hard-to-reach areas, where their services are most
needed. We also urge countries to invest in quality training, good working
conditions, decent salaries, adequate workforce policies and possibilities for
professional growth.
Midwives are our heroes and the backbone of sexual and reproductive health.
Let us support them and the women and newborns at the heart of their care
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