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Monday, November 25, 2024
HomeHealthMaternal, Child Mortality Fall As US Increase Funding

Maternal, Child Mortality Fall As US Increase Funding

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Maternal and child mortality in Zimbabwe has gone down from 960 deaths per every 100 000 live births in 2010 to the current 651 per 100 000 live births amid commitment by the United States government to increase funding to towards the complete eradication of maternal and child health in the country.

At Manna Resorts in the United States today (Friday) the US Agency for International Development (USAID), celebrated the success of Maternal and Child Health Integrated Program (MCHIP) together with the Ministry of Health and Child Care (MOHCC).

Since its launch in 2013, the USAID-supported MCHIP activity has demonstrated impressive achievements to reduce maternal, newborn, and child deaths.

As a result, between 2014 and 2017, there has been a 43 percent reduction in maternal deaths, a 36 percent reduction in newborn deaths, and a 25 percent reduction in deaths in children under the age of 5 years in the health facilities supported by USAID/MCHIP.

USAID Zimbabwe Acting Deputy Mission Director, Julie Nenon said, “The United States is proud to increase access to high quality health care for Zimbabwean families. Over the last four years, this successful program improved the health of 230,000 mothers and 1.5 million babies and children in Manicaland province, Zimbabwe.”

In Manicaland province, MCHIP has scaled up effective MNCH interventions at 36 health facilities and in communities, targeting women from pregnancy to child birth, women immediately after child birth, newborn and preterm babies, and infants and children under five.

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MCHIP Director, Rose Kambarami praised the program saying it has improved maternal, child, and newborn health by ensuring that more health facilities are equipped to provide basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric and neonatal care, treatment of sick children, essential newborn care, and management of childhood illnesses.

MCHIP has also trained over 1,300 health care workers to improve MNCH, giving them the knowledge and skills to carry on this important work long after the activity ends.”

Moreover, it has improved prevention and treatment of malaria in Manicaland province by training 3,000 community-based health care workers in malaria case management. This resulted in the timely detection and treatment of over 4,000 malaria cases, improving health and saving lives in rural communities that have difficulty gaining access to health clinics.

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Journalist based in Harare

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