Developing a Human Rights-Based Approach to Addressing Maternal Mortality
Author: K Hawkins and K Newman
Date: 2005
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58 pages
(478 KB)
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Can a rights-based approach reduce maternal mortality? Can its focus on equity improve health outcomes for poor women? This review, by the UK Department for International Development (DFID), argues that rights-based approaches can add impetus to reducing maternal mortality. It argues that policy actors in government and civil society should find ways of addressing the economic, social, cultural and political forces that prevent poor women from asserting their right to maternal health.
Although improving maternal health is one of the Millennium Development Goals, few countries have progressed in reducing maternal mortality during the last 20 years. Unacceptably high maternal mortality rates prevail. This can be attributed to the status of women, the systematic violation of their basic human rights and failing health systems. Rights-based approaches can uncover the power dynamics that perpetuate these inequities, and suggest strategic interventions such as the reallocation of resources, changing accountability mechanisms within health systems and communities and challenging existing hierarchies in health facilities.
Evidence indicates that supporting maternal health services in an isolated way will not make an impact on maternal mortality rates as a whole. More systemic change is needed.
DFID must match its commitment to applying a rights-based approach to maternal mortality with a recognition of, and advocacy for, the benefits of doing so.
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Source:
Hawkins, K. and Newman, K., 2005, ‘Developing a Human Rights-Based Approach to Addressing Maternal Mortality - Desk Review’, Department for International Development (DFID) Health Resource Centre, London
Author:
DFID Health Resource Centre (HRC), http://www.dfidhealthrc.org/index.html