News

Entertainment

Sports

Business

Africa

Live Radio

Country

Webbers

Lifestyle

SIL

GHS launches campaign to reduce maternal mortality

Dr Patrick Kuma Aboagye.png Director-General of Ghana Health Service, Dr. Patrick Kuma-Aboagye

Wed, 15 Dec 2021 Source: www.ghanaweb.live

Women, girls resort to unsafe abortions due to stigma-Kuma-Aboagye

Read full article

45,659 women, girls had abortions in 2020- GHS

Half of pregnancies recorded yearly in Ghana are unintended- Kuma-Aboagye


A year-long campaign has been launched by the Ghana Health Service to significantly reduce the spate of maternal mortalities across Ghana. This campaign is in line with achieving goal 3 of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Ghana’s maternal mortality ratio currently stands at 308 per 100,000 live births, way below the SDG target of less than 70 deaths per 100,000 live births by 2030.

The campaign dubbed ‘Zero Tolerance for Maternal Deaths ‘primarily targets decreasing unintended pregnancies among women and girls through the provision of safe abortion and family planning services to reduce maternal deaths in the country.

Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, Dr. Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, during the launch of the campaign themed, “Stop Preventable Maternal Deaths and Disabilities,” said nearly half of pregnancies recorded in Ghana annually were unintended, leading women and girls to resort to unsafe termination of feotuses which result in life-long complications and sometimes, death, Ghanaian times stated in their report.

He noted that although abortion-related maternal deaths were highly preventable, issues of stigma among other social and economic factors discouraged women from seeking safe techniques for terminating unintended pregnancies.

“This is why the GHS is seeking everyone’s support to remove all the barriers and unfair treatments that push women and girls with unintended pregnancies to dangerous paths that lead to their untimely deaths.

The campaign is further seeking support for these unfortunate people to avail themselves to the best and safest techniques for terminating unwanted pregnancies to save their lives and for timely family planning to prevent further unintended pregnancies,” Kuma Aboagye is quoted to have stated.

Bemoaning the plight of women who resort to unsafe abortions, Dr. Kuma said “no woman or girl in Ghana should ever have to use unsafe abortion due to social stigma or financial limitations.”

He said all health facilities across all levels had been authorised to provide safe abortion care to reduce the country’s maternal Mortality rate and promote the family system and contribute to socio-economic growth.

“Let us remember that abortion care is healthcare and that is all that some women and girls need to survive,” he urged.

The Director of Family Health Division of the GHS, Dr. Kofi Issah, said data from the Emergency Obstetrics and Neo-natal Care (EMONC) assessment implied that 45,659 women and girls had abortions in 2020.

He said, out of the figure, 5,596 suffered severe complications and 28 representing 3.2 percent died as a result. Adding that “of all unsafe abortions, one-third were performed under the least safe conditions, by untrained persons using dangerous and invasive methods.”

Dr. Issah said interventions like the inclusion of clinical family planning methods into the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was a major game-changer in reducing preventable maternal deaths in the country.

To this end, the Director mentioned strategies the campaign would deploy including multi-stakeholder engagements, intensified public education on implementation of family planning services on the NHIS, the legal provisions on abortion, distribution of social and behavioural change communication materials and orientation of health workers, to reduce abortion-related deaths.

Source: www.ghanaweb.live