"An important reason for deaths of mothers" ... a plan to counteract the bleeding of the births

The World Health Organization released its first way to treat postpartum bleeding on Tuesday, which is defined as excessive bleeding after birth, which affects millions of women annually and is the most important cause of the deaths of mothers in the world. Despite the possibility of preventing it and its treatment, bleeding after birth is one of the dangerous and life -threatening complications, which occurs immediately after birth, and it is a great burden on the health of the mother and the fetus. The next bleeding of the situation often occurs without warning, and its rapid appearance can have devastating consequences for mothers, families and societies, and also lead to about 70,000 deaths each year. For those who survive, it can cause disabilities and psychological trauma that last for years. A new roadmap and the roadmap determine a time series to combat the bleeding of the postpartum between 2023 and 2030, and it also contains a priority to develop new and broader guidelines for the next bleeding. These benchmarks cover prevention, detection, treatment and scientific research to provide innovations and increase access to interventions that have proven their usefulness, and the creation of a new purchasing mechanism to improve the supply of medicine and goods of high quality, invitation and awareness, training and improvements at the level of facilities. The Director General of the World Health Organization, Dr. Tedros Adhanum Guerbrisus said that serious bleeding during birth is one of the most common causes of mothers’ deaths, but it can be significantly prevented and treated, paying attention to a statement that the new roadmap is a way to move to a world with a greater number of women with a safe birth and a healthy future with their families. The road map aims to help countries speak blatant differences in the results of survival from the following bleeding of the situation, reflecting the great inequality in access to basic health services. The statement states that more than 85% of the deaths of the next bleeding of the situation in sub -Saharan Africa and South Asia occur. The risk of death due to the next bleeding of anemia, placenta malformations and other complications during pregnancy, such as infections and pregnancy poisoning. Various risk factors can be managed if good care is available, including access to ultrasound, as well as effective monitoring in the following hours of childbirth. If the bleeding begins, it must be discovered and treated very quickly. However, every two minutes “health facilities do not have workers or resources in the field of healthcare, including life -saving factors such as oxytocin, tranicamics or blood. The director of sexual and reproductive health and reproductive health at the World Health Organization, Pascal AWTI, said that the treatment of postpartum bleeding requires a multiple approach that focuses on prevention and response, which provides risk factors and provides immediate access to treatment, in addition to the broader efforts to improve women’s rights. ‘Aloi’ said that every woman, no matter where she lives, should take care of high quality motherhood, and over time, with two trained health professionals, basic equipment and shelves full of appropriate and effective merchandise, “and it is very important to treat bleeding after birth and reduce the deaths of mothers.” It is estimated that a woman dies every two minutes for pregnancy or birth reasons. Limited progress has been made in reducing these deaths since 2015, and the statement states that the world is far from the right path to achieve the goals of the appropriate sustainable development goals. The road map was developed by extensive consultations in which more than 130 experts participated in various fields. The World Health Organization and its partners will provide specialized technical support for countries to adapt global guidelines with national policy, starting with the areas where there is the greatest burden of maternal deaths.