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New Global Study Shows Maternal Mortality Significantly Lower Than Previously Thought
A new study out this week by the leading British medical journal shows
maternal mortality rates have been significantly overestimated by United
Nations (UN) agencies.
The Lancet reports that maternal deaths worldwide in 2008
totalled 342,900, rather than the 500,000+ used by the World Bank, World
Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) in recent
years.
The study finds both that the numbers from WHO and UNICEF were faulty
due to a lack of proper reporting and also imprecise statistical
modelling. But The Lancet study also finds progress has been made in
preventing pregnant women from dying.
The study cites four main reasons for the improvement: declining
pregnancy rates in some countries, higher per capita income, higher
education rates for women, and increasing availability of basic medical
care including “skilled birth attendants.”
The report finds that HIV/AIDS caused 60,000 maternal deaths and
suggests that maternal deaths would have been significantly lower in
Africa if mothers were given antiretroviral drugs. This sharply
contradicts current UN and Obama administration policies, which divert
funding from HIV/AIDS to family planning as a way to reduce maternal
deaths.
The study shows that 50% of maternal deaths come from just six
countries; India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Ethiopia and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Researchers were surprised that three of the richest countries in the
world actually showed increased maternal mortality; the United States,
Canada and Norway - three countries with the most liberal abortion laws
in the world.
What was not cited anywhere in the document is abortion.
Contrary to this study, the UN has promoted better maternal health
through legal, or “safe,” abortion. At the UN-sponsored Women Deliver
Conference in London two years ago, which was billed as a conference on
maternal mortality, abortion advocate Frances Kissling told C-Fam's
Friday Fax the conference was a “pro-choice conference.”
The Lancet’s editor Dr. Richard Horton told the New York Times he was
pressured “by advocacy groups” to delay publication of the report until
later this year.
Horton said the groups wanted the information withheld until after the
current UN Commission on Population and Development (CPD), the Women
Deliver Conference scheduled for this June in Washington DC, and the
next UN General Assembly, which is also scheduled to address maternal
mortality.
Pro-life critics of the maternal mortality numbers have long complained
that the 500,000 number was likely too high and based on ideological
assumptions.
Dr. Donna Harrison, writing in a C-FAM briefing paper last year, said
the WHO introduction of medical abortion in some countries to reduce
maternal mortality has been based on unreliable data, unreliability now
confirmed by the much broader and more detailed study by The Lancet.
Regarding the new Lancet study, Harrison, the president of the American Academy of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists (AAPLOG) said:
“This
study uses the best statistical methods currently available and clearly
demonstrates that worldwide legalization of abortion is unnecessary to
bring about significant decreases in maternal mortality. AAPLOG
encourages UN member nations to continue to develop even better
statistical information by improving the identification of maternal
mortality causality, especially induced abortion related mortality,
which is most often underreported or misreported.”
There is little doubt that this new study will have a direct impact on
the negotiations going on this week at the UN CPD, where the negotiated
document on maternal mortality includes dozens of references to
reproductive health, which is used as a codeword for abortion.
[15April2010, Susan Yoshihara, Ph.D. and Austin Ruse, www.C-FAM.org, http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2010/apr/10041505.html ]
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