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The forgotten emergency of maternal healthcare in the Central African crisis

The forgotten emergency of maternal healthcare in the Central African crisis
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The forgotten emergency of maternal healthcare in the Central African crisisDecades of instability and armed violence in Central African Republic (CAR) have contributed to essential medical care being out of reach for many pregnant women and newborn babies. Overshadowed by the security situation in the country, tackling this everyday emergency is a priority for Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams. 

Divine has been labouring in pain for hours, her right hand clutching the bedpost, her left hand crumpling her orange and green loincloth. Her baby is overdue and Divine is exhausted. In the labour ward of Bangui's community hospital, the nurse has just administered oxytocin, a hormone to speed up the frequency and intensity of her contractions. 

In this unit dedicated to high-risk deliveries, women are closely monitored by medics, who check their health and their baby's heart rate every 30 minutes. If a woman’s labour goes on too long, she can be taken to the operating theatre to have a caesarean.

 

Such attentive care is far from common for Central African women about to give birth. In a country which is severely short of health facilities and medical staff, few pregnant women have access to appropriate obstetric care. 

“Many women do not go to a health centre for their delivery but give birth at home,” says Adèle Guerde-Seweïen, an MSF midwife at Bangui's community hospital, known as the CHUC. “In this situation, complications can easily lead to the death of mother or child.”

An extreme situation 

A scream rings out across the hospital ward. A woman has just learned of the death of her pregnant sister. Minutes earlier, she had been rushed to hospital and taken straight to the operating theatre. But it was too late. The medical team did their utmost to stabilise her but only managed to save her baby. 

“This tragedy would not have happened if she had had access to medical care in time,” says Guerde-Seweïen.

Maternal and neonatal health is a major health emergency in CAR. The country’s maternal and child mortality rates are among the highest in the world. According to the most recent statistics [1], women are 138 times more likely to die of pregnancy and delivery complications in CAR than in the EU, while a baby in CAR is 25 times more likely to die before its first birthday than if it had been born in Europe. 

A severe lack of emergency healthcare

“In CAR, to be born or to give birth is to take a risk,” says Professor Norbert Richard Ngbale, an obstetrician-gynaecologist in the CHUC’s maternity and neonatology department.

“There are only about 15 gynaecologists in the country, for a population of six million. There is a massive lack of qualified staff, especially in rural areas, where you mostly have traditional birth attendants who are not trained to detect complications,” he says.

Most maternal deaths in CAR are related to unsafe abortions and women who give birth at home, but also to pregnancies that occur too early (when the girl or woman is too physically immature to give birth safely).

Many of these deaths could be avoided if healthcare was available, either in terms of pregnancy support or family planning provision. CAR’s chronic medical emergency is also fuelled by extreme poverty: although maternal and child healthcare is officially free in CAR, too often it is only available to those who can pay.

“In a country where 70 per cent of people live on less than US$2 a day, every decision must be weighed up financially, even if it means putting one's health at risk,” says René Colgo, MSF head of mission in CAR.

“For patients, going to hospital is an expense. They don't have money to pay for antenatal care, nor for transport to hospital, let alone for the delivery. Many women think it is better to go to hospital at the last minute, if at all. Supporting the provision of free care is therefore vital.”

“This time, I wanted to avoid any risk”

As a mother of eight, who experienced complications in childbirth with her seventh baby, Carine Dembali did not want to risk arriving too late at the hospital this time. 

“With the exception of my first child, I have always given birth at home due to lack of money,” she says. “But the last time there was a problem. My baby came out but the placenta didn’t.

“My family rushed me to Castor’s [a hospital with a maternity ward previously managed by MSF], where I didn't have to pay anything. That’s why this time I wanted to avoid any risk. I went to the hospital near my home before the delivery. They saw that the cord was threatening my child and I was brought here for a caesarean,” says Carine. 

The CHUC’s maternity and neonatal wards, which were fully renovated by MSF before opening in July 2022, provide emergency care to pregnant women and newborns in critical situations. From mid-July to Mid-December, teams of MSF and the Ministry of Health provided care to 3,084 pregnant women, and 860 babies were admitted in the neonatal ward, including 239 born preterm.

Kangaroo care 

Few hospitals in the country provide a similar service, which includes an intensive care unit for premature babies and newborns who have trouble breathing and other complications. 

Archange, who was born at just 28 weeks (compared to a normal gestation of 38-40 weeks), fought for his life for 45 days in the intensive care unit of the CHUC. The medical team were so impressed by his fight to survive that they nicknamed him “little general”. 

“He weighed 800 grams at birth,” says his mother, Stephanie. “His twin sister unfortunately died after two weeks and I thought I was going to lose him too.” 

The MSF team persuaded her to try ‘kangaroo care’, where premature babies are held close to their mother’s bodies 24 hours a day. The prolonged skin-to-skin contact keeps them warm, maintains their emotional balance and ultimately improves their chances of survival. 

“When he came out of intensive care, we started the ‘kangaroo method’,” says Stephanie. “I was stressed and not convinced. But soon I saw that he was getting better and better, and that his health was improving. Today he weighs 1.5 kg. Soon I'll be able to go home with him.” 

A priority for MSF teams 

The critical situation in CAR around maternal and child healthcare has prompted our teams to provide free emergency obstetric care for women and newborns in locations across the country.

We are also training Ministry of Health staff and renovating and equipping medical facilities so they can provide a good standard of care. In 2021, MSF teams helped nearly 19,600 women to give birth, including 1,020 by caesarean, while 1,900 newborn babies were treated in MSF-supported neonatal units across the country. 

Yet more support is needed to bring these essential services to women and babies countrywide.

“The situation calls for ambitious investment by all international partners to strengthen access to reproductive health services,” says Colgo. “It is unacceptable that so many women’s and babies’ lives are being lost every day for reasons that are so easily preventable.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Médecins sans frontières (MSF).

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The forgotten emergency of maternal healthcare in the Central African crisis

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