(Press-News.org) Contact information: David Orenstein
david_orenstein@brown.edu
401-863-1862
Brown University
NAS report: Make childbirth safer in Indonesia
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Indonesia is a fast-rising economic power that has made significant progress toward key development goals including reducing child mortality. But for reasons outlined in a National Academy of Sciences report by U.S. and Indonesian experts, the nation's estimated rates of maternal and neonatal mortality remain tragically high. The report, highlighted at a joint U.S.-Indonesian public event in Jakarta Jan. 30, makes sweeping recommendations to advance the safety of childbirth in Indonesia.
"Indonesia still has a very significant challenge when it comes to maternal and newborn and child mortality," said NAS report committee co-chair Dr. Eli Y. Adashi, professor of obstetrics and gynecology in the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.
Among the consensus findings of the committee, also led by Mayling Oey-Gardiner, professor of economics at the University of Indonesia, is that the national government's current efforts to address the problem, including producing more than 150,000 midwives in just six years, have fallen short.
Complicated medical problems can arise in any delivery and can require interventions such as cesarean section surgery, Adashi said. Instead of maintaining a health care system in which most women give birth in their home or the home of a midwife, with only a midwife's assistance, Adashi said, the committee recommends that Indonesia build up a tiered infrastructure of certified obstetric health care facilities and provide transportation capabilities, such as medical helicopters, to ensure that women in the archipelago nation can reach those facilities. The nation also must improve the insufficient training of its cadre of midwives, he said, but more importantly increase the supply of obstetric and neonatal nurses and doctors as well.
"We know what works elsewhere in the world, and we know that what's in place is not working," Adashi said. "In a sense we are saying, 'You really have to abandon the current strategy because it's not working and go to what is the working model.'"
Ambitious recommendations
Adashi said the committee knows its recommendations are "audacious and ambitious" rather than incremental, but that anything less would likely not help Indonesia reduce a lifetime maternal death risk that for the year 2010 was estimated to be 1 in 210. That risk ranked third highest among the 10 ASEAN member states.
In all, the report features eight recommendations:
Build up a network of basic and more comprehensive obstetric and newborn care facilities that are staffed and equipped to handle deliveries and complicated emergencies 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Formulate strategic plans on five-, 10-, and 20-year time horizons to provide high coverage of quality maternal and neonatal health services across the country.
Centralize the system of obstetric and neonatal care — and the training and licensing of providers — under a central government authority that is represented down to the municipal level around the country.
Revise training for doctors and nurses who specialize in obstetrics, neonatal care, and anesthesia services. Strengthen the training of midwives to recognize emergencies and to create birth plans for delivery at a certified facility.
Develop sufficient and effective financing mechanisms for obstetric and newborn services.
Improve data gathering, such as by establishing a registry of maternal and neonatal outcomes including deaths. Current data regarding outcomes are based on household surveys that have sometimes proven to be statistically unreliable.
Integrate Indonesia's strong corps of local community health volunteers into an overall system that promotes health further, by facilitating transportation, birth planning, and postnatal health services.
Expand education for women and girls to empower them with knowledge about childbirth issues. "In Indonesia, more than 60 percent of the women who die in childbirth have not had the benefit of a primary education," the authors wrote in the report.
With investments in better facilities, transportation, and medical training and education in Indonesia, childbirth can become much safer for mothers and babies, Adashi said.
INFORMATION:
In addition to Adashi and Oey-Gardiner, the report's other authors are George Adriaansz, Peter Berman, Robert Goldenberg, Suigdo Sastroasmoro, Anuraj Shankar, and Soeharsono Soemantri.
NAS report: Make childbirth safer in Indonesia
2014-01-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Parkinson gene: Nerve growth factor halts mitochondrial degeneration
2014-01-30
This news release is available in German. Neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's disease ...
Campus police officers' role in sex assault cases
2014-01-30
HUNTSVILLE, TX (1/30/14) -- With high rates of sexual assault at colleges and universities, campus law enforcement officers are important facets of a campus' response to this crime. The Crime Victims' Institute at ...
Storage system for 'big data' dramatically speeds access to information
2014-01-30
As computers enter ever more areas of our daily lives, the amount ...
CU-Boulder researchers sequence world's first butterfly bacteria, find surprises
2014-01-30
For the first time ever, a team led by the University of Colorado Boulder has sequenced the internal bacterial makeup of the three major life stages of a butterfly ...
Signs point to sharp rise in drugged driving fatalities
2014-01-30
The prevalence of non-alcohol drugs detected in fatally injured ...
Dartmouth researchers develop new tool to identify genetic risk factors
2014-01-30
(Lebanon, NH, 1/30/14) —Dartmouth researchers developed a new biological pathway-based computational model, called the Pathway-based Human Phenotype Network (PHPN), ...
Study finds brachytherapy offers lower rate of breast preservation compared to standard radiation for older women with breast cancer
2014-01-30
HOUSTON — When comparing treatments designed to enable long-term breast preservation for older ...
NASA gets 2 views of Tropical Cyclone Dylan making landfall in Australia
2014-01-30
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Cyclone Dylan and captured both visible and infrared imagery of the storm as it began landfalling. The visible image showed the extent of the storm, ...
Women with mental health disability may face 4-fold risk of abusive relationship: Study
2014-01-30
TORONTO, ON, January 30, 2014 – Women with a severe mental health-related disability are nearly four times more likely to have been a victim of intimate partner violence ...
Researchers reverse some lung diseases in mice by coaxing production of healthy cells
2014-01-30
BOSTON, January 30, 2014—It may be possible one day to treat several lung diseases by introducing proteins that direct lung stem cells to grow the specific cell types ...