Save the Children State of the World's Mothers report

The lifetime risk of maternal death from pregnancy-related causes from the SOWM2010 report. Each color represents a twofold difference
— risk more than one in:
  8
  16
  32
  64
  128
  250
  500
  1000
  2000
  4000
  8000
  16000
  32000
  64000
Millennium Development Goal 5 represents a change of two colors (75% reduction) for each nation.

The Save the Children State of the World's Mothers report (SOWM report)[1] is an annual report by the Save the Children USA, which compiles statistics on the health of mothers and children and uses them to produce rankings of more than 170 countries, showing where mothers fare best and where they face the greatest hardships.[2][3][4] The rankings are presented in the Mothers’ Index, which has been produced annually since the year 2000.[5]

The 2014 report focuses on saving mothers and children in humanitarian crises. It finds that over half the 800 maternal and 18,000 child deaths every day take place in fragile settings which are at high risk of conflict and are particularly vulnerable to the effects of natural disasters.[6]

The 2014 report ranks Finland the number one place to be a mother. Somalia in the Horn of Africa replaced Democratic Republic of the Congo (ranking 178th) as the worst place in the world to be a mother. The United States is down one spot from 2013, ranking 31st. Statistics show that 1 in 27 women from the bottom ranking countries will die from pregnancy-related causes. In addition, 1 in 7 children will die before his or her fifth birthday.[7]

2014 SOWM Report: Key Findings

2013 SOWM Report: Key Findings

An original analysis by Save the Children estimates that within the first month of life, more than 1 million babies could be saved each year with universal access to these products, which cost between 13 cents and $6 each and are ready for rapid scale-up now. The products are:

2012 SOWM Report: Key Findings

Vital Statistics

Types of Malnutrition

Stunting - Stunting is when a child is too short for their age. It is caused by poor diet and frequent infections. Generally, stunting occurs before the age of 2, with largely irreversible effects. These effects include: delayed motor development, impaired cognitive function, and poor performance in school.

Wasting - Wasting is when a child's weight is too low for their height. Wasting is caused by acute malnutrition. It is a strong predictor of mortality for children under 5 years old. Usually, it is caused by either food shortage or disease.

Underweight - When a child is underweight, the child's weight is too low for their age. Being underweight can mean the child is stunted, wasted or both. Weight is an indicator of short-term undernutrition. A deficit in height (i.e. stunting) is difficult to correct but a deficit in weight (i.e. underweight) can be resolved if nutrition and health are improved later in childhood.

Micronutrient deficiency - Micronutrient deficiency is when a child is lacking essential vitamins or minerals such as Vitamin A, iron, and zinc. These deficiencies are caused by a long-term lack of nutritious food or they can be caused by infections such as worms.

Nutrition in the First 1000 Days

There are 171 million children (17%) globally who do not have the opportunity to reach their full potential. This is due to not only the physical, but the mental effects of poor nutrition in the earliest months of life.

Children's Wellbeing of the Mother's Index

Out of 171 countries, Iceland is first and Somalia is last.

"Lifesaving Six"

More than half of the world's children do not have access to the "Lifesaving Six": iron folate, breastfeeding, complementary feeding, vitamin A, zinc, and hygiene.

Vitamin A

Zinc

Hygiene

Breastfeeding

2012 Mothers' Index

Norway [7]

Niger [7]

2011 Mothers' Index

Norway [8]

Afghanistan [8]

2010 SOWM Report: Key Findings

2010 Mothers' Index

Norway [9]

Afghanistan [9]

Press coverage

The reports have been widely covered in the world press, with attention for local strengths and weaknesses. For example, in 2010 USA Today focused on the low ranking of the U.S. (28th place, below Estonia, Latvia, and Croatia) due to high rates of maternal and infant mortality, low preschool enrollment, and a particularly weak maternal leave benefit.[10] It quoted the report:[11]

"A woman in the United States is more than five times as likely as a woman in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece or Italy to die from pregnancy-related causes in her lifetime and her risk of maternal death is nearly 10-fold that of a woman in Ireland."

ABC News interviewed physicians and nonprofit leaders who questioned whether global comparisons could be made reliably, due to possible differences in the definition of ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth, and abortion statistics. Relevant factors may include lack of health insurance, illegal immigration by women with poor prenatal care, and maternal obesity statistics. According to Michael Katz, a senior vice president at the March of Dimes Foundation, "The major question I would ask is, 'Why do African American populations have worse results than the white population?'"[12]

Infant mortality rates before age 5. Map colors mark rates per 1000 of at least:
  3
  4
  8
  16
  32
  64
  128
  257

Pravda.ru and Sify picked up an IANS/EFE report focusing on Cuba's rating as the best place to be a mother in the developing world.[13][14] The Herald Sun boasted Australia's second-best placement for mothers, quoting a happy mother about hospital, maternal and child health support, and 12-month workplace maternal leave.[15] However, the Adelaide Advertiser focused on Australia's lower [28th] ranking on the Children's Index, due in part to a child mortality rate three times higher for aboriginal infants.[16] It quoted Save The Children's Annie Pettitt:

An important first step would be to tackle the shortfall of almost 2000 midwives in Australia, especially in remote and rural areas where we know the shortage is greatest.

An editorial in the Philippine Daily Inquirer discussed explanations for the Philippine's 48th-place ranking in the second tier. The column attributed much of the problem to a "brain drain", though it described as "much too high" the SOWM report's figure that 85% of Filipino nurses leave to pursue better pay and standards of living overseas. It questioned standards at "diploma mills" and called for incentives to bring health professionals into poor communities, while criticizing the chilling effects of a "raid on a training session of health-care workers" as subversives in Morong, Rizal. The Philippines local chapter of Save the Children produced a State of Filipino Mothers report in 2008 with rankings by province.[17]

The Times of India lamented India's 73rd of 77th place in the second tier, describing a critical shortage of 74,000 accredited social health activists and 21,066 auxiliary nurse midwives below governmental norms and that thousands of women were dying because they could not access the most basic healthcare facilities or that, if they were available, they were low quality.[18]

Though data for some countries are not known with much certainty, the SOWM 2010 report had many findings in common with a recent study published in The Lancet, which found that 23 of 181 countries are on track to achieve Millennium Development Goal 5 of a 75% reduction in maternal mortality rate between 1990 and 2015.[19][20]

Activism

The 2010 report was released by Save the Children in Canada on May 4, 10:00 a.m., as a part of an action directed toward members of Parliament in support of an announcement by Prime Minister Stephen Harper that child and maternal health would be the top priority at the 36th G8 summit in Huntsville, Ontario in June. As described in the press release:[21]

In the week leading up to Mother's Day, 5,700 mothers around the world will die. During this Mother's Day week, CARE, the Canadian Association of Midwives, Plan Canada, Results, Save the Children Canada, the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada, UNICEF and World Vision have joined forces in Ottawa to get the attention of the government and public, to have Canada put its leadership at the upcoming G8 into action and stop preventable child and maternal deaths

2014 rankings

The list is incomplete and only includes the top 35 countries.[22]

RankCountryLifetime risk of maternal deathExpected # of years of formal schooling
1  Finland 12,200 17.0
2  Norway 7,900 17.6
3  Sweden 14,100 15.8
4  Iceland 8,900 18.7
5  Netherlands 10,500 17.9
6  Denmark 4,500 16.9
7  Spain 12,000 17.1
8  Germany 10,600 16.3
9  Australia 8,100 19.9[note 1]
9  Belgium 7,500 16.2
11  Italy 20,300 16.3
12  Austria 8,100 15.6
13   Switzerland 9,500 15.7
14  Portugal 9,200 16.3
15  Singapore 25,300 14.4
16  New Zealand 3,300 19.4[note 2]
17  Slovenia 5,900 16.8
18  Canada 5,200 15.8
19  Ireland 8,100 18.6[note 3]
20  France 6,200 16.0
20  Greece 25,500 16.5
22  Luxembourg 3,200 13.9
23  Estonia 25,100 16.5
24  Czech Republic 12,100 16.4
24  Lithuania 9,400 16.7
26  Belarus 16,300 15.7
26  United Kingdom 4,600 16.2
28  Israel 5,100 15.7
29  Poland 14,400 15.5
30  South Korea 4,800 17.0
31  United States 2,400 16.5
32  Japan 13,100 15.3
33  Croatia 4,100 14.5
34  Latvia 2,000 15.5
35  Cuba 1,000 14.5

Notes

  1. Discounted to 18 years prior to calculating the index rank
  2. Discounted to 18 years prior to calculating the index rank
  3. Discounted to 18 years prior to calculating the index rank

Additional maps (statistics pertaining to females)

Years formal schooling
Modern contraception usage
Lifespan
National government seats
Earned income relative to males
Gross preprimary enrollment ratio

See also

References

  1. Save the Children (2014-05). "State of the World's Mothers". Check date values in: |date= (help) (the SOWM 2014 report landing page)
  2. International Save the Children Alliance (2010-05-03). "State of the World's Mothers Report 2010: Best and Worst Places to be a Mother". Reuters AlertNet.
  3. Marcela Sanchez (2006-05-11). "World Mother's Report:Small Changes Can Save Small Lives". Washington Post.
  4. Celia W. Dugger (2007-05-08). "Report on Child Deaths Finds Some Hope in Poorest Nations". New York Times.
  5. See for links to all of the annual SOWM reports.
  6. 1 2 http://www.savethechildren.org/site/c.8rKLIXMGIpI4E/b.8585863/k.9F31/State_of_the_Worlds_Mothers.htm
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 http://www.savethechildren.org/atf/cf/%7B9def2ebe-10ae-432c-9bd0-df91d2eba74a%7D/SOWM_2014_MOTHERS_INDEX.PDF
  8. 1 2 http://www.savethechildren.org/atf/cf/%7B9def2ebe-10ae-432c-9bd0-df91d2eba74a%7D/SOWM2011_FULL_REPORT.PDF
  9. 1 2 3 http://www.savethechildren.org/atf/cf/%7B9def2ebe-10ae-432c-9bd0-df91d2eba74a%7D/SOWM-2010-Women-on-the-Front-Lines-of-Health-Care.pdf?msource=weefuchc0711
  10. Michael Winter (2010-05-04). "Survey ranks Norway best for mothers, U.S. 28th". USA Today.
  11. SOWM 2010 report, p. 34
  12. "Where's the Best Place to be a Mom?". ABC News. 2010-05-08.
  13. "Cuba Provides Best Conditions for Motherhood in the World". Pravda.ru. 2010-05-05.
  14. IANS/EFE (2010-05-05). "Cuba rated best place to be a mother in developing world". Sify.com.
  15. Marianne Betts (2010-05-05). "We are great for mothers". Herald Sun.
  16. Edwina Scott (2010-05-04). "Australia second best country in world to be a mum - report". AdelaideNow.
  17. Michael Tan (2010-05-11). "Mothers and elections". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
  18. Times News Network (2010-05-04). "India among worst places to become a mother: Survey". The Times of India.
  19. Jo Chandler (2005-05-08). "The toughest kind of labour". The Age.
  20. {{cite weburl=http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736%2810%2960518-1/fulltext|title=Maternal mortality for 181 countries, 1980—2008: a systematic analysis of progress towards Millennium Development Goal 5|date=2010-05-08|journal=The Lancet|author=Margaret C. Hogan et al.|volume=375|issue=9726|page=1609-23|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60518-1}}
  21. World Vision Canada. "Media Advisory - A week to save moms and their kids". CNW Group.
  22. http://www.savethechildren.org/atf/cf/%7B9def2ebe-10ae-432c-9bd0-df91d2eba74a%7D/SOWM_2014_MOTHERS_INDEX.PDF
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