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The UNICEF’s State of the World’s
Children’s Report 2009, released yesterday,
said Sri Lanka’s achievements in scaling up
health services for mothers and infants and
its success in slashing maternal and
neonatal mortality rates has made the lower
middle income country a model for other
developing nations.
'Sri Lanka is a strong example of how the
health and survival of mothers and their
newborns are linked, and how many of the
interventions that save new mothers' lives
also benefit their infants,' the Report
added.
The country’s efforts to empower and
educate women together with providing
essential heath services have been vital in
saving the lives and mothers and infants.
According to the Report, “Sri Lanka has
managed to halve its maternal mortality rate
every six to 11 years by adopting sound
strategies, allocating sufficient resources,
providing free health care, making education
for all a priority and having the political
commitment to improve the health of mothers
and children”.
“In spite of decades of civil conflict
and the devastating effects of the 2004
tsunami, Sri Lanka has 'the political
commitment to improve the health of mothers
and children',” said the report. Between
1960 and 2005, the maternal mortality ratio
fell from 340 to 44 per 100,000 live births.
Since 1990 the under-five mortality rate has
dropped from 32 per 1,000 live births to 13
per 1,000 in 2000. UNICEF has noted that Sri
Lanka’s positive results are due in part to
a considerable scaling up o essential health
services for mothers and infants.
More than 95 per cent of births in Sri
Lanka take place in hospitals with a doctor,
skilled nurse or midwife in attendance.
Immunisation coverage is almost universal at
99 per cent and rates of antenatal care are
also high at 95 per cent.
“Measures to empower women through
education, employment and social engagement
have also had a positive impact on the
health of mothers and children”.
According to the report, the maternal
mortality ratio had dropped from 340 to 44
per 100,000 live births between 1960 and
2005. Since 1990, the under-five mortality
rate has also dropped from 32 per 1,000 live
births to 13 per 1,000 in 2000. More than
half a million women worldwide die as a
result of pregnancy or childbirth
complications, including about 70,000 girls
and young women aged 15 to 19. Since 1990,
complications related to pregnancy and
childbirth have killed an estimated 10
million women. The Report recommends that
essential services be provided through
health systems that integrate home,
community, outreach and facility-based care.
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