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Pregnant
women in grave danger
Zimbabwe
Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR)
November 20, 2008
ZADHR is deeply concerned
that the lives of pregnant women have been placed in jeopardy by
the closure of the only 2 government maternity hospitals in Harare.
If these women develop complications and are unable to afford private
hospital care, they will no longer have access to lifesaving surgical
and other forms of emergency obstetric care. Inevitably, this will
result in the unnecessary deaths of many otherwise healthy women
and an even larger number of infants.
An average of 3000 women
deliver per month in public hospitals in greater Harare and between
250 and 300 of them require lifesaving caesarian sections. Many
more have deliveries assisted by forceps or vacuum extraction when
their babies show signs of distress and a lack of oxygen. In addition,
mothers who miscarry earlier in pregnancy require surgery to evacuate
the uterus to avoid serious and often fatal infections and bleeding.
Without access to these interventions a significant number of mothers
will die. The risk to their infants is much greater as the majority
of caesarian sections and instrumental deliveries are performed
to rescue babies who are suffering from a lack of oxygen during
labour. We can therefore expect a dramatic increase in the number
of stillbirths and of infants who have suffer irreversible brain
damage which will result cerebral palsy and severe mental retardation.
The Children's Rehabilitation
Unit at Harare Central Hospital has witnessed a 3 fold increase
in infants presenting with severe brain damage from birth complications
since 2004. This is a reflection of a general decline in obstetric
care which has mirrored the economic decline. The current crisis
could result in an immediate ten to twenty fold increase in the
number of such infants.
For most mothers there
is no alternative to the public maternity hospitals. The cost of
Caesarian Section in private hospitals in Harare is in the region
of US$1500, well beyond the means of the vast majority. While some
mothers have attempted to access treatment at hospitals outside
of Harare, enquiries have established that these are only a tiny
fraction of those needing emergency care are accessing these hospitals.
Marondera, the nearest provincial hospital to Harare, is no longer
able to perform Caesarian Sections or any other form of surgery.
ZADHR therefore calls
for the immediate establishment of a temporary facility at one of
the main maternity hospitals in Harare capable of providing emergency
obstetric care, including Caesarian Section, for the indigent population.
Visit the ZADHR
fact
sheet
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