Skip to content

It’s Time to Break Barriers to Maternal Health and Rights

<p>Woman brazil recife slum pregnant Zika</p>
Woman brazil recife slum pregnant Zika

By experts and staff

Published
  • Guest Blogger for Women Around the World

Voices from the Field features contributions from scholars and practitioners highlighting new research, thinking, and approaches to development challenges. This article is authored by Serra Sippel, president of the Center for Health and Gender Equity.

Healthy women and girls are the cornerstones to building communities that are safe, just, and thriving; and rights-based maternal health care is the linchpin to realizing women’s health and rights. Yet women are dying and suffering debilitating disease and injury during pregnancy and childbirth due to preventable causes: they bleed to death, acquire infections, have underlying but treatable health conditions, or obtain unsafe abortions.

The fact is that becoming pregnant is still one of the most dangerous things a woman can do in her lifetime.

Every woman has a right to safe motherhood and the way forward to improving maternal health is not a mystery. A new ninety-second video released by the Center for Health and Gender Equity (CHANGE) highlights six fundamental barriers to advancing maternal health:

To break these barriers to maternal health, we need greater leadership and a coordinated global movement to advance the health and human rights of all women and girls. That is why advocates, non-governmental organizations, health care providers, and policymakers from around the world are recognizing International Day for Maternal Health and Rights.

Earlier this month, more than 350 organizations and individuals from around the world joined the call on the United Nations to recognize April 11 as International Day for Maternal Health and Rights. We must all add our voices to this call and stand up for women and girls and for respectful maternal health care.

When the health and rights of all women and girls are respected, protected, and honored, they can live the lives they want and build communities that are safe, just, and thriving; and that means a better world for all.