You Can Help Make Pregnancy Safer

Imagine earning less than $2 a day, then learning that you are not only HIV positive but pregnant. Imagine having lost seven children to starvation and learning that you are pregnant again. Imagine learning you are pregnant when you’ve seen many women in your village die from uncontrollable bleeding after giving birth.

Sadly, for many women in the world this is not just a thought exercise but the reality they live every day. In the Ms. issue on newsstands today, author Belle Taylor-McGhee visited Tanzania, one of the world’s poorest countries, to report on how women and groups are taking action to make pregnancy and delivery safer. It’s part of a global effort to achieve Millennium Development Goal #5–reducing by 75 percent the number of maternal deaths worldwide.

That means making sure births are attended by skilled health professionals, achieving universal access to reproductive health care (which is judged by such measures as contraceptive prevalence and adolescent birth. In her travels, Taylor-McGhee spoke with healthcare professionals, expectant mothers and women leaders from the organization Women’s Dignity.

Another reproductive health organization, Pathfinder International, is running a special campaign called “Make a Choice” to raise awareness about how women in impoverished nations have little access to life-saving reproductive health care. The following You Tube video is the story of Georgette, a mother who turned reproductive health activist after learning about Pathfinder International in her community.

As part of its fundraising efforts, Pathfinder will match donations up to $50,000 that are received by October 31. Understandably, many of us are caught up in the Nov. 2 hullaballoo, but maternal mortality doesn’t pause for U.S. elections.

Photo from Flickr.com user USAID_IMAGES through Creative Commons License 2.0

About

Kathleen Richter is a recent graduate of the University of California, San Diego in the field of International Studies. She has been a feminist ever since kindergarten when she proved that she too could belch with the best of them. When she is not engaged in life-sustaining activities, she is most likely either drawing feminist comics or writing feminist sentences.