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In Malawi, a small, landlocked nation in southeastern Africa, hardly anyone congratulates a woman who is pregnant. They will do so only after she gives birth, and then only if both mother and child survive.
That’s because Malawi, the poorest country on the planet, has the world’s highest rate of preterm births. Women there have a one-in-29 lifetime risk of dying from childbirth-related causes. And their babies face even more dire odds: The neonatal mortality rate in Malawi is 22 per 1,000 live births, or one in 45.
Such statistics are almost unimaginable to those living in the U.S., where the maternal mortality rate is just one in 3,800 and the neonatal mortality rate is just four per 1,000 live births (or one in 250). But that discrepancy is all too real to Melanie Perera, MS ’12, who spent three years training nurses in Malawi.
“In one year there,” says Perera, “I saw more babies and children die than I’d seen in five years as a nurse at Stanford.”
UCSF MagazineSummer 2017
Read a digital flipbook of the entire summer issue of UCSF Magazine, featuring this and other stories.
Perera didn’t hesitate when she was asked by School of Nursing faculty members Kimberly Baltzell, RN, PhD ’05, and Sally Rankin, RN, PhD ’88, to direct a new program called Global Action to Improve Nursing and Midwifery (GAIN). Baltzell and Rankin, founding directors of the nursing school’s Center for Global Health, created the program to train Malawian nurses in leadership and clinical skills and to offer on-site coaching for a year afterward. They hope the program will not only turn the tide on childbirth-related mortality in Malawi, but also help address the nation’s critical need for nurse training.
GAIN will launch in September with a cohort of 20 Malawian nurses. The trainees will learn clinical practices based on World Health Organization standards, which range from ...
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Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Tackling Childbirth-Related Mortality in the World’s Poorest Place
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