The promotion of maternal health and mortality reduction is of worldwide importance, and constitutes a vital part of the UN Millennium Development Goals. The highest maternal mortality rates are in developing countries, where global and regional initiatives are needed to improve the systems and practices involved in maternal care and medical access. Taking a practical policy approach, this book covers the background and concepts underlying efforts to improve maternal and perinatal mortality, the current global situation and problems that prevent progress. It includes case studies and examples of successful strategies, recommends good practices, and provides a critical analysis of knowledge gaps to inform areas for future research.
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Taking a practical approach, this book covers the background and concepts underlying efforts to improve maternal and perinatal mortality, the current global situation and problems that prevent progress. It includes case studies and examples of successful strategies, recommends good practices, and provides a critical analysis of knowledge gaps.
Les mer
PART I: THE GLOBAL CONTEXT 1: An introduction to maternal and perinatal health 2: The millennium development goals 3: The politics of progress: the story of maternal mortality 4: The epidemiology of maternal mortality 5: The epidemiology of stillbirths and early neonatal deaths PART II: PROGRAME IMPLEMENTATION 6: Health systems 7: Financing maternity care 8: Implementing clinical interventions within maternal health programmes 9: Medical conditions in pregnancy: preventing and managing indirect obstetric morbidity 10: Improving the availability of services 11: Geographical access, transport and referral systems 12: Demand for maternity care: beliefs, behaviour and social access 13: Empowering the community: BRAC’s approach in Bangladesh 14: Quality of care 15: Monitoring and evaluation 16: Addressing maternal health in emergency settings
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'This book is timely and important. It is not just an easy to use reference text for those working in maternal and perinatal global health. Rather, it is a call to arms for all obstetric and neonatal trainees and clinicians…I urge you to read it.' PLOS Medicine 'The edited volume Maternal and Perinatal Health in Developing Countries provides an excellent introduction to and comprehensive overview of maternal and perinatal health. The contributing authors, who are leaders in the field of maternal health, bring strong academic credentials and in-depth country experience from around the world.' – Studies in Family Planning
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Biografisk notat

Julia Hussein trained as an obstetrician and gynaecologist in Ireland and the UK. She worked in Afghanistan as a clinician and then in 'public health obstetrics', implementing maternal mortality reduction programmes for UNICEF and the UK government in several countries in Asia and sub Saharan Africa. Currently at the University of Aberdeen, she is a senior researcher with interests in programme implementation, monitoring and evaluation, quality of maternity care and capacity strengthening. Research activities on vitamin and trace element status of population groups, genotyping of single nucleotide polymorphisms, post processing of experimental and epidemiological data, 16 years of academic experience in Germany, Austria and New Zealand. Ann Starrs is co-founder and president of Family Care International, a non-governmental organization dedicated to making pregnancy and childbirth safer in the developing world. During the more than two decades since FCI’s founding in 1987, Ann has launched and headed field programs in Africa, managed FCI’s crucial role as coordinator of the Safe Motherhood Inter-Agency Group, and authored numerous seminal publications and articles. She assumed the presidency of FCI in 2008. Ann is widely recognized as a leading advocate and technical expert on maternal health, and currently is co-chair of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health and member of steering committees and advisory boards for a broad range of international maternal and reproductive health initiatives. Before joining FCI, Ann worked with the International Planned Parenthood Federation and Carnegie Corporation of New York. She is trained in development economics and demography, with a Masters degree from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and a certificate in Demography from Princeton’s Office of Population Research.