Soroptimist International’s Programme Director, Reilly Dempsey, is attending the 10th World Congress on Maternal and Neonatal Health in Rome. The congress opened yesterday. Here is her report from the first half day of events, seminars and debate:
The focus of the first half day of the conference was maternal
and infant care in poor resource settings.
Interestingly, although the topics presented were extremely
varied, one underlying theme emerged in nearly all of the talks. Maternal and infant care in resource rich
countries improved dramatically in the first half of the 20th
century. Resource poor countries
significantly lag behind. But the
question we were faced with at the turn of the century was whether what worked
in resource rich countries would, at bottom, work in resource poor countries? Were the risks the same? Would the same interventions work? What did the evidence say?
Although the contexts can be dramatically varied, it also
seems that emerging research and evidence is showing that the same scientific
and medical interventions which decreased maternal, neonatal, and child
mortality in resource rich countries can indeed work in resource poor
countries. Here are some examples:
- Anaemia in pregnant women and children under
five is considered to be a public health crisis in many countries. It was the same with sickle cell anaemia in
the US back in the 1970s, but, driven by the civil rights movement (it was seen
as a “black” disease), effective and fairly cheap solutions were developed
which had a dramatic effect – screening, vaccinations, and antibiotics (in
short, non-medical terms!). Research is
now showing that the same interventions are having a positive effect in some
countries in Africa. - Sub-Saharan Africa, as a whole, has an extremely
low physician to population ratio, just 13/100,000 compared to countries such
as India (60/100,000), Brazil (192/100,000) and the United States
(280/100,000). Individual countries on the continent have physician to
population ratios as low as 1-2/100,000.
A fascinating project called the Sub-Saharan African Medical Schools
Study (SAMSS – http://samss.org/), is
connecting African experts to international experts to improve medical schools
and training facilities for African healthcare professionals, using many of the
same principles of training used in resource rich settings (. The Matres Mundi project (http://www.matres-mundi.org) is also
based on such collaborations and learning. - The EMERGENCY project (http://www.emergency.it/who-we-are.html),
working in many resource poor settings, brings health care models from resource
rich/developed countries into developing countries. The results have been incredibly
positive. They believe in a new idea of
sustainability – one where they don’t come into a country, work for 2-3 years,
then leave, but one built on long term investment and dedication, including
direct management, long term investment in training on the job, and supervision
by international professionals. - The PROMPT project (PRactical Obstetric
Multi-Professional Training http://www.prompt-course.org/)
is a course which was originally designed and carried out in the UK to ensure
that health care professionals were appropriately trained in handling obstetric
emergencies. Although the course is
tailored to different settings, the basic principles remain the same and it has
now been implemented in USA, Italy, Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand,
Singapore, Fiji, Cook Islands, and others, and is about to be rolled out in
Zimbabwe. The PROMPT course is also the
basis of the course Soroptimist International is supporting for clinicians in
Papua New Guinea with Birthing in the Pacific.
This theme of tailoring interventions from resource rich settings
to resource poor settings is one that deserves thought and attention. We will see if it echoes throughout the rest
of the congress.
We also heard keynote lectures from Kara Britt on the
relationship between ovulation cycles and reproductive cancers and from Giuseppe
Benagiano on striking the balance (at population level) between overpopulation
(i.e. don’t reproduce) and ageing societies (i.e. do reproduce).
There were many thought provoking talks and presentations, and we’re
only through 1/5 of the congress!
More reports to follow throughout the week!