Sub-Saharan Africa

Words: 809
Pages: 4

Every person in the world should have the right a healthy life. Yet some will people never get to experience that. In developed countries, such as the United States, we see birth as a beautiful, magical moment. We go to the hospital and our families are invited. But, imagine going into labor and being brought to a hospital where one nurse watches over thousands of women. Or, imagine not even being able to go to a hospital and having to deliver at home, with little to no knowledge on what’s going on. That’s what a lot of women in underdeveloped countries experience. Sometimes, they die or become seriously ill after giving birth. They will never be able to have the healthy life they once lived again. It’s uncommon in the United States, which …show more content…
One of them was to improve maternal health. By the looks of the chart from then to now, there is still a high mortality rate in Sub-Saharan Africa, which is unacceptable. Among the other areas they studied, it ranges from low to moderate mortality rate. A majority of counties have low access to reproductive health knowledge, or didn’t make much progress in trying to get from moderate access to high access. In Sub-Saharan Africa, there is low access and little progress in improving that. So we now know two things: Sub-Saharan Africa has high maternal death rates and low access to reproductive health knowledge. Yet here we are in America, taking for granted that we often have healthy births and all the knowledge we could ever ask for. While it’s obvious that effort is being made based on the UN goals, it’s clear that there is more to be …show more content…
“According to the WHO, 10,000 pregnant women and 200,000 infants die every year from malaria, which increases the chances of fatal anemia, stillbirth, low birth weight and neonatal death (Kantrowitz).” This is also a matter of death of the child in some ways as well. It’s crucial that medicine for malaria is provided to all, and that there are measures being taken to help stop mosquitos carry the disease. Babies are dying from complications during pregnancies due to diseases, or after being born from the diseases themselves. HIV is another issue. It can cause postpartum bleeding or anemia, and yet over 2 million girls with HIV are giving birth every year. Their compromised immune systems also cause them to be more likely to contract other diseases which can cause problems. Women with HIV are also likely to spread the disease to their babies. If the proper medicine and prevention techniques can be provided, these death rates can drop