For the Health of Women and Children - Let's take action
According to the State of the World's Midwifery launched in June 2011, more than one in three women in developing countries give birth alone - or with only relatives to oversee what is one of the most critical passages they will ever undergo. In some of the poorest countries, as few as 13 per cent of all deliveries are assisted by a midwife or a health worker with the specific midwifery skills that are required to save lives.
The current global shortage of some 350,000 professional midwives means that women and their newborns die from complications that could have been easily prevented by a health worker, in the right place, at the right time, with the right skills, the right equipment and the right support of the health system..
Addressing the conference, Vice Minister of Health Nguyen Viet Tien appreciated the effective support from the Viet Nam Association of Midwives in delivering reproductive health care and saving the lives of many Vietnamese women, especially women in remote, mountainous and hard-to-reach areas. He also emphasized that the conference was a great opportunity for health workers from developing countries to learn from experiences from developed countries in the world.
According to data from the MOH and other population based surveys,
However, it should be noted that the country still has many challenges to address. "There are still big demographic differences between the river deltas and mountainous areas, with higher MMR in remote and ethnic minority areas. It is also important to strengthen the health system and to invest in health workers with midwifery skills, and ensure access to emergency obstetric care when complications arise. These measures, if implemented comprehensively in
Within the framework of the Government of Viet Nam andUN one Plan (2012-2016), the UN in Viet Nam, including UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO and UNAIDS, is committed to support Viet Nam in health system strengthening by addressing the human resource shortfall in skilled birth attendants, reinforcing the status of midwifery, developing their competencies in line with regional and international standards and empowering midwives to provide the health-care services they are trained to deliver.
Source: UN in