thehindu.com

Many pregnancy-related complications going undetected and untreated: WHO

Haemorrhage, defined as severe heavy bleeding, and hypertensive disorders like preeclampsia are the leading causes of maternal deaths globally, according to a new study released today by the World Health Organization (WHO).

These conditions were responsible for around 80,000 and 50,000 fatalities respectively in 2020 – the last year for which published estimates were available -- highlighting that many women still lack access to life-saving treatments and effective care during and after pregnancy and birth.

Published in the Lancet Global Health, the study is WHO’s first global update on the causes of maternal deaths since the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals were adopted in 2015.

In addition to outlining the major direct obstetric causes, the study showed that other health conditions, including both infectious and chronic diseases like HIV/AIDS, malaria, anaemias, and diabetes, underpin nearly a quarter (23%) of pregnancy and childbirth-related mortality. These conditions, which often go undetected or untreated until major complications occur, exacerbate risk and complicate pregnancies for millions of women around the world.

“Understanding why pregnant women and mothers are dying is critical for tackling the world’s lingering maternal mortality crisis and ensuring women have the best possible chances of surviving childbirth,” said Pascale Allotey, director of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research at WHO as well as the UN’s Special Programme on Human Reproduction (HRP). “This is also a massive equity issue globally - women everywhere need high quality, evidence-based healthcare before, during and after delivery, as well as efforts to prevent and treat other underlying conditions that jeopardize their health.”

Other direct causes include sepsis and infections; pulmonary embolism; complications from spontaneous and induced abortions - including miscarriage, ectopic pregnancies, and issues relating to unsafe abortions; and, anesthetic complications and injuries that occur during childbirth.

Published - March 08, 2025 07:43 pm IST

Read Comments

RemoveSEE ALL

PRINT

Related Topics

health

Read full news in source page