Expectant
mothers not visiting ANC clinics regularly – WHO
ONLY half the number of pregnant women in Nigeria and
other countries in sub-Saharan Africa are receiving the minimum
number of four Antenatal Care, ANC, visits recommended by the World
Health Organisation, WHO, to ensure the well-being of mothers and newborns.
This development, which is contained in the Millennium
Development Goals, MDGs, Report 2013, revealed that in 2011, only 49 per cent
of pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa received at least four antenatal care
visits during their latest pregnancy.
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An Expectant Mother |
In 2010, the Federal Government introduced the Midwifery Service
Scheme, MSS, and deployed over 4,000 Midwives to 1,000 health facilities
nationwide.
According to the Report, health care during pregnancy can save
lives, just as good quality care during pregnancy is fundamental to the health,
well-being and survival of mothers and their babies.
ANC visits should include tetanus toxoid vaccination, screening
and treatment for infections, and identification of warning signs during
pregnancy.
During such visits, pregnant women are also tested for HIV; if
positive, they receive help and guidance in living with the virus and avoiding
transmission to their babies.
The women receive intermittent treatment to prevent HIV
infection, thereby averting adverse outcomes for mother and baby if infected
during pregnancy.
In Nigeria, commencement of antenatal care within the
first 14 weeks of gestation is widely accepted as early and booking after
the 14th week of pregnancy is regarded as as late.
Good Health Weekly gathered that most women either
register late for their antenatal clinics because of a belief that there are no
advantages in booking for antenatal care in the first three months of
pregnancy, or as a result of the myth that antenatal care is viewed
primarily as curative rather than preventive
Experts say early commencement of antenatal care by pregnant
women as well as regular visits, has the potential to affect maternal and
foetal outcome positively. It provides education and counselling on expected
physiological changes, the normal course and possible complications of
pregnancy, labour and puerperium.
Calling for adoption of a population moderation management
system, President/CEO, Association for Reproduction and Family Health, ARFH,
Professor Oladapo Oladipo, said Nigerians ought to be having only the number of
children they can cater for.
“There are many poor people in this country. Let us look
at a situation where one man has one wife and three children, and there is
another who has three wives and 12 children. There will be a situation where
there is transfer of burden from the latter to the former who has moderated his
family,” Ladipo asserted.
Further, he noted that there is always a health risk to the
woman who has too many children. “We know that fertility can relate to
development because if families have fewer children per woman, then they have
fewer mouths to feed. We can see at the family level that having fewer
mouths to feed could help to reduce poverty and free more money to educate or
help each child. And many analysts, including UNFPA analysts, have done
research that shows slower population growth also reduces poverty at the
national level.”
In his argument, Ladipo said Nigeria could endeavor to
meet its National Policy on Population and Sustainable Development, NPPSD,
targets and to help Nigerian families that already want to use modern
contraceptives, which would increase the nation’s modern contraceptive
prevalence rate, CPR.
“Fertility affects health mainly because certain types of births
are exceptionally risky. ‘Risky births’ are defined as births that are
too closely spaced, or when the mother is too young or too old, or when the
mother has too many children. All of these could cause death or injury to
the mother and child.
On challenges of family planning services in the country, he
said 1 in 5 married Nigerian women has unmet need or child spacing methods or
tools. “A woman expresses desire to space or limit births, but is not using any
method to do so. This is more than six million couples who are not receiving
services.
Lower fertility puts less strain on our healthcare system and
health workers, including midwives. Under the Low Fertility Scenario, number of
midwives required would increase more slowly.”
Culled from
Vanguard newspaper
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