Teach Traditional Ethiopian Midwives to Save Lives
WhatProject Needs and BeneficiariesOver half a million women die in childbirth every year. That’s twice as many deaths than from the 2004 tsunami. 99% of these deaths are in developing countries. Hemorrhage after delivery is the most common cause of maternal death worldwide. Our projects are the first to show traditional midwives can stop women from bleeding to death in their own homes. Well beyond the reach of hospitals and government health services, home births are made much safer with misoprostol. ActivitiesThrough clinical studies requested by the government, we provide evidence that the drug can be safely administered by traditional midwives, who accompany the vast majority of births. We train 100 traditional midwives and support 1,000 births. Funding InformationTotal Funding Received to Date: $5,238 Additional DocumentationResourcesWhyPotential Long Term ImpactMaking misoprostol available will give midwives the power to save tens of thousands of women from needlessly bleeding to death after delivery. Mothers surviving childbirth improves the health of newborns and well-being of families. Project Message
Women here give birth at home with the traditional midwife. The health center is far away, closed at night, and there are no drugs. Women die without help in the village. Who
WhereCountry
This project is located in For more information about Ethiopia, read the Human Development Report on Ethiopia or the Wikipedia entry for Ethiopia. WhenLast UpdatedThis project was last updated on August 25, 2009. Date Added to GlobalGivingThis project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on September 02, 2005. Latest Update from the FieldFirst 250 of planned 600 traditional midwives trained to save mothers’ lives with misoprostolBy Emma Nesper - Communications Specialist, August 25, 2009 12:45 PM
A traditional midwife trained to provide misoprostol through our project recounted a story that is all too common in rural Ethiopia. She identified excessive blood loss in a woman who had just delivered her baby, but the woman’s family did not have money to send her to the hospital for additional care. By the time community members assembled enough money to transport her, it was too late. “If the solution [misoprostol] is at hand, we will work closely with health extension workers to save the lives of mothers,” the traditional midwife said.
Venture Strategies is successfully making misoprostol an essential component of safe childbirth for the millions of women who stand to benefit from access to the simple, low-cost tablet in Ethiopia. We are supporting the nurse-midwives association in training village-level health workers in the proper use of misoprostol to prevent excessive bleeding, or postpartum hemorrhage (PPH), in home births, since nearly 94% of mothers deliver at home in Ethiopia. In June 2009, our project trained 250 of a planned 600 traditional midwives as well as 100 health extension workers, government-sponsored primary care providers. This project is unique as it establishes linkages between Ethiopia’s government health providers and village-level traditional midwives by training both on misoprostol and how to work together more effectively to reach women and provide safe deliveries. Our efforts to make these life-saving tablets available in communities are met by enthusiasm from health professionals at the higher levels who recognize the role of misoprostol in safe childbirth. By empowering traditional midwives and health extension workers in villages with the skills to properly use misoprostol for PPH prevention, we are contributing to a reduction in the number of mothers who must be referred to the already overburdened health facilities and therefore, the number of mothers who risk dying from a delay in receiving care. We are encouraged by our progress towards reducing maternal deaths in Ethiopia and appreciate the support we receive from generous donors. |

Ethiopia
Health