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INDIA: Return of Traditional Birth Attendants Urged to Meet MDG 5 By Ranjit Devraj NEW DELHI, Oct 14 (IPS) - As India struggles to lower one of the world's highest maternal
mortality rates, activists and experts are calling for a revision of polices aimed at
"institutionalising" deliveries in resource-poor rural settings and phasing out
the 'dai' or traditional birth attendant (TBA).
According to a report released last week by Human Rights Watch (HRW),
India's maternal mortality rate is 16 times higher than Russia's and 10 times
higher than China's. Also, in several parts of the vast country, the rates have
been worsening in spite of various government schemes and programmes -
and possibly because of them.
In 2005, the maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in India was 450 per 100,000 live
births, slightly lower than the average ratio of South Asia (which comprises
the country), estimated at 490, considered the second highest by region, next
to African.
According to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) an estimated
80,000 Indian women, either pregnant or new mothers, die each year from
preventable causes, including haemorrhage, eclampsia, sepsis and anaemia.
The HRW report, 'No Tally of the Anguish: Accountability in Maternal Health
Care in India,' focuses on India's most populous state of Uttar Pradesh to
show persistent failures in providing care for pregnant women. It also
identifies caste discrimination, lack of accountability and limited access to
emergency care as chief causes of maternal deaths.
Annie Raja, general secretary of the Communist Part of India-affiliated
National Federation of Indian Women (NFIW), told IPS that the failures were at
least partly driven by policies blindly designed to meet the fifth Millennium
Development Goal (MDG5) of reducing MMR by three quarters by 2015.
MDGs are eight development goals to be achieved by 2015.
''There is a belief that MMR can be brought down by increasing skilled
attendance at deliveries without considering realities on the ground such as
non-functional or absent
primary health centres as well as lack of personnel and funds," said Raja. A
key MDG5 prescription is to maximise the number of births attended by
skilled health personnel.
In India this has meant a gradual phasing out of the 'dai' or TBA, who is
considered illiterate, unskilled and difficult to train in the handling of
pharmaceutical drugs that may be required during a birth emergency.
Until 2005 when India launched its flagship National Rural Health Mission,
some of the country's estimated one million 'dais' were also given training
and had some recognition, but they have since then been steadily replaced by
Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) whose main job is to register
pregnant women and encourage them to seek institutionalised care at
government facilities.
An ASHA (which translates as 'hope' in Hindi) must be literate and have
received primary education until class eight. She acts as a primary health
worker and receives incentives for providing referral and escort services for
pregnant women to health care centres.
But there are real practical problems, said Raja. "An ASHA gets just 600
rupees (12.8 US dollars) per live delivery in a government facility and is
expected to bear the costs of
transporting the pregnant woman and other costs along the way. If the
delivery takes place outside the hospital premises, she gets nothing and then
she has no training in midwifery."
"Also, while the programme promised 'concrete service guarantees' such as
free care before and during childbirth, emergency obstetric services and
referral in case of complications, beneficiaries were limited to women
classified as living below the poverty line or else belonged to tribal or 'dalit'
(low caste) groups," Raja said.
While a few 'dais' turned into ASHAs, the literacy criterion ensured that the
vast majority of them got excluded, along with skills gained through sheer
experience.
"There is nothing wrong with the concept of 'skilled attendance at birth' as
defined by the World Health Organization [WHO] and UNICEF except for the
simple fact that basic health services are simply not available to the vast
majority of people in India," said Raja.
Dr Usha Shrivastava, a former researcher at the prestigious All-India Institute
of Medical Sciences, said the problem is one of resources. "’Dais’ provided a
real service by operating
in areas far away from any centre where a skilled birth attendant (SBA) may
be available and deal with pregnant women who are often anaemic,
malnourished and have no access to safe drinking water and, therefore,
already compromised," she said.
Shrivastava, editor of 'Health Positive,' a journal that specialises in 'best
practices in clinical
and public health,' said that even if qualified doctors or SBAs can be taken to
remote rural areas, there is little that they can do in a birth emergency in a
setting where there is no electricity, blood bank or sterile settings.
Usha and Raja are not alone in their view that 'dais' should be empowered
rather than phased out, as envisaged under MDG5.
A team of researchers led by Anthony Costello at the department of child
health at University
College, London, reported in 2006 that while TBAs were not a substitute for
trained midwives, they were the main provider of care during delivery of
millions of women, especially in settings where mortality rates were high.
"Since 1990 international agencies and academics without robust evidence
have persuaded
governments to stop training programmes for traditional birth attendants,"
Costello commented in the British 'Lancet' journal.
Many national policies promoting institutionalisation of birth deliveries follow
the ideals of the 'Safe Motherhood Initiative' launched in Nairobi in 1987 by
the WHO, UNICEF, the United Nations Population Fund and the World Bank
and by the International Conference on Population and Development in 1994.
In September 2000, 189 world leaders committed their nations to the MDGs,
which included improving maternal health.
Raja said that in India a medical elite and a bureaucracy anxious to tote up
figures showing
increasing institutionalisation of deliveries have forgotten the harsh realities
of rural India. "It is not difficult to see why, in spite of various government
policies, only 17 percent of all deliveries in this country take place in a
hospital or are attended to by an SBA," she said.
Raja said the best way out is to develop alternate strategies that recognise
the services and skills of TBAs, and incorporate them into the health system
in such a way that women in the rural areas and those that belong to
marginalised groups are adequately covered.
Gargi Chakravarthy, a Delhi University historian and an activist with the NFIW,
said the
marginalisation of TBAs or 'dais' stretches back to British colonial times and
has continued into contemporary India through policies drawn up by a
bureaucracy with colonial moorings. "We need firstly to reorient the
bureaucracy to current realities," she said.
Chakravarthy pointed to copious documentation that shows the systematic
devaluation of traditional health practitioners under colonial rule and the
gradual replacement of the 'dai'
by "lady health visitors" who promoted modern obstetric practices. The
colonial period also saw the setting up of many hospitals where lying-in care
was first made available for pregnant women.
"It was possible for Britain and other industrialised countries in the West to
drastically reduce
maternal mortality in the last century by providing professional midwifery
care and by improving access to hospitals. This model was later followed by
developing countries, but success depended crucially on the existence of a
functioning health delivery system," Chakravarthy said.
Raja believes that the success of MDG5 lies in first implementing MDG3,
which calls for the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of
women. "Too many of the decisions in public health are made by men while
women's voices and concerns are routinely ignored."
"Last week's HRW report," said Raja, "comes as no great surprise when the
cruel reality is that the public health system, which was once a mainstay of
healthcare for more than 75
percent of the population, has fallen into neglect through the privatisation of
health care and reduced budgetary allocations that now stands at slightly
more than one percent of GDP."
"There is also the question of political will. Surely a country that calls itself an
emerging power produces world-class doctors, has some of the finest
medical facilities anywhere and promotes medical tourism can find a way to
reach meet the MDGs," Raja said.
(END/2009)
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