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Welcome to the safest time to give birth in human history

created Jun 8th, 16:46 by JMNo


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"Between 2000 and 2017, the global maternal mortality rate fell by 38%.
In low-income countries, the decline was more dramatic still, with a reduction of 46%."
 
The loss of a mother or a child during pregnancy or birth is a heartbreaking family
tragedy, one that has been with humanity since the dawn of our species.
Prior to the 20th century, pregnancy, childbirth,
and post-birth recovery were among the times of greatest danger for all women.
The risk was compounded significantly by global fertility rates,
which remained very high for much of human history.
The average American woman alive in 1820 had roughly 6.6 children,
while the global average was 5.75. Every pregnancy was a life-or-death gamble,
and the outcome for mother and child was too frequently grim.
 
Millennia of terrible loss
Some of the oldest reliable records for maternal mortality come from Sweden,
and they show a rate of 1,205 mothers lost for every 100,000 live births in 1758.
That figure is staggering, and it is highly representative of the global mortality rate
at that time. (To put that figure into perspective, the maternal mortality rate
today in Sweden is 7 per 100,000, a decrease of 99.4%.)
Maternal mortality rates remained extremely high
throughout the next two and a half centuries.
 
In 1904, the U.S., UK, and Australia respectively lost 790, 397, and 609 mothers
per 100,000 live births. The maternal mortality rate remained high for millennia
because little was done to address the causes effectively,
the most common of which both then and now were severe bleeding
and infection after childbirth,  complications in delivery, obstructed labor,
and to a lesser degree, complications arising from unsafe abortions.
For much of history, doctors often did more harm than good.
Physicians’ intentions may have been sound, but they worked from a place
of deep ignorance of the workings of the female body,
as well as of the germ theory of disease. Prior to the 20th century,
women with the means to have a doctor attend their birth found their
reserves of strength sapped by what was little more than guesswork.  
 
Prior to the advent of modern surgical procedures for addressing
obstructed labor and other severe childbirth complications,
doctors employed gruesome tools and techniques. In the face of highly
obstructed labor, a not uncommon condition, families and physicians
were forced into the position of trying to save the mother or the child,
but rarely both.
 
A global turning point
Despite the lack of modern medical care, maternal mortality rates
improved gradually throughout much of the 18th century and into
the early 19th century. Better nutrition, access to clean water,
cleaner birthing spaces, improved access to midwifery care,
and improved sanitation were powerful forces that pushed
maternal mortality down. But it was the introduction of effective
and widely available antibiotic treatment that finally brought
about major progress in saving the lives of mothers.  
 
Beginning in the early 1930s, much of the developed world
experienced a sharp and sustained decline in maternal mortality,
with the rate in the U.S. falling by 88% between 1930 and 1950.
An almost identical rate of decline prevailed across the developed
world in those decades. From the UK to France and from
Australia to the Netherlands, fewer women per capita were dying
as a result of pregnancy and childbirth than at any point in
recorded history. It turned out that the same antibiotics that saved
Allied lives in the battlefield hospitals of World War II were also
remarkably effective at saving the lives of mothers.
Their use, beginning with penicillin, was a game-changer in  
he fight to help mothers avoid life-threatening post-birth infections.
 
Combining antibiotics with more births taking place in medical
facilities or attended by skilled healthcare staff resulted in
yet more saved lives. In Afghanistan, the percentage of births
attended by skilled healthcare staff climbed from just 12% in
the year 2000 to 59% by 2018. Over that same stretch of time,
the country saw a reduction in maternal mortality of 56%.
The story is similar across the vast majority of low- and
middle-income countries, especially in Asia and Africa.
The number of women who have their pregnancy, birth, and post-birth
attended by healthcare professionals rises with each passing year,
and maternal outcomes are improving in lockstep.
 
The enormous strides taken over the last 50 years in the fight
against maternal mortality were not the result of antibiotic therapy alone,
nor indeed of any single breakthrough. Improvements came about
as a number of smaller forces matured and as all
these tools became more widely available.  
 
Closing the gap on maternal mortality
Economic growth and globalization helped bring the remarkable
progress experienced by the world’s high-income countries
to many of the world’s low- and middle-income countries.
Between 2000 and 2017, the global maternal mortality rate fell by 38%.
In low-income countries, the decline was more dramatic still,
with a reduction of 46%.  
 
While the number of women who die in childbirth has declined
significantly across the globe, there remains a large gap in outcomes
between high-income countries and the rest.
Today nearly all countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have maternal
mortality rates that at their best lag dramatically behind those of rich countries.
In 2017, Chad’s rate of 1,140 deaths per 100,000 live births,
and South Sudan’s 1,150 deaths per 100,000,
more than doubled the UK’s rate in 1850.
 
The more economically disadvantaged and poor a country is,
the more likely it is that mothers will die during or shortly after childbirth.
Today nearly all maternal deaths, almost 95%, are experienced by
women living in low- and middle-income countries.
In 2020, roughly 800 women every day were still succumbing to death from
preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth.
 
As global economic opportunities continue to improve for the world’s poor,
many countries are becoming better equipped to help save
the lives of mothers and children.
In short, countries with well-performing economies can afford the
medical equipment, operating facilities, and trained healthcare
professionals that save lives.
Moreover, such countries also can improve accessibility
to healthcare services, allowing more mothers the opportunity
to receive life-saving care during and after birth.
 
Naturally, one of the least expensive and most readily deployable
aids in reducing maternal mortality is effective family planning.
When sexually active women have safe, inexpensive, and unobstructed
access to contraceptive options, they are best equipped to plan
their pregnancies.
Such planning helps reduce the likelihood of becoming pregnant
again too soon after giving birth,or too frequently over their reproductive lifetime.
Access to contraceptives and condoms also dramatically reduces the
likelihood of unplanned and unsafe abortions, another leading cause
of high rates of maternal mortality, especially in the world’s poorest regions.
 
The slow road to progress
Undoubtedly, the overall story is one of progress, with maternal
mortality falling gradually almost everywhere.  
Healthcare providers now have a comprehensive understanding of
how to keep mothers and babies alive, and no major scientific or
technological breakthroughs are needed. The economic and cultural challenges
to improved maternal mortality outcomes that remain in many countries
are considerable,but they are not insurmountable.  
 
This article was published at Big Think by Tony Morley on 14/5/2023.

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