This past June, I visited Ethiopia as a fellow with the International Reporting Project with the primary goal of examining the impact of Ethiopia’s success at achieving Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 4 – reducing child under age five deaths by two-thirds – well before the 2015 MDG deadline. Granted it is a stunning achievement that has put the spotlight on Ethiopia, it can also be argued that Ethiopia as well as many other countries around the world are failing to reach critical milestones for other MDGs such as maternal health. MDG 5 – to reduce maternal deaths by 75% and achieve universal access to reproductive health – is trailing way behind the other goals coming in near the bottom.
According to a recent article published in The Lancet*, only 16 countries out of the 189 United Nations member states who committed to the goals are expected to meet MDG 5 by 2015. The consequences of this are devastating to women and their families.
The tragic facts about maternal deaths
- Every day, 800 women die from causes related to pregnancy or childbirth.
- When a mother dies, the risk of death for her children under the age of five increases by 50%.
- The number one killer of 15-19 year old girls worldwide is pregnancy and childbirth. Every year, 70,000 young women die as a result of pregnancy and childbirth – over 70% of these deaths are preventable.
Access to universal reproductive health, the other piece of MDG 5, is also lagging behind. There are millions of women, mostly poor and rural, who have no access to family planning and are unable to space or plan their children. Furthermore, this year alone it is estimated that nearly 22 million unsafe abortions will take place around the world resulting in millions of preventable maternal deaths and longterm disabilities.
Ethiopia, the second most populous country in Africa, is one of the five most dangerous places to be a mother in the world. One in 27 women die from complications of pregnancy or childbirth (25,000 annually) in Ethiopia.
With a population of 90 million, it is estimated that anywhere from 80-90 percent of mothers give birth at home with no trained assistant. In rural areas, where over 85% of the population live, it is even worse. Only an estimated 5% of mothers give birth in a health center with a trained delivery assistant. The chart below illustrates where Ethiopia falls compared with her neighbors:
This means that Ethiopia’s maternal mortality rate is estimated at 420 per 100,000 live births (2013 WHO/UNFPA) which lumps Ethiopia along with India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria, as the top five highest maternal mortality rates in the world. As the population continues to boom in Ethiopia, it is critical that improvements are made to women’s access to family planning, safe abortions and labor and delivery care which would significantly reduce the number of women dying and having serious injuries during childbirth.

The alarmingly high ratios of health care professionals per patients is another factor in high maternal mortality rates in Ethiopia. It is estimated that only 34% of women have received prenatal care and 57% of women have received no pre or postnatal care during pregnancy. Source: Marie Stopes Ethiopia.
Seeing a huge, unmet need for family planning and reproductive services, Marie Stopes International begin working in Ethiopia in 1990. Marie Stopes International works to provide sexual and reproductive healthcare to millions of underserved women around the world and has been delivering family planning, safe abortion, and maternal health services to the world’s poorest and most vulnerable women for over 35 years.
“Women are dying because of lack of services and information. Having better access to family planning helps improve the lives of women and their families”.
– Marie Stopes Ethiopia Director Abeba Shibeau
Marie Stopes works in seven administrative states in Ethiopia, and runs a three-tier level of service throughout the country through Marie Stopes clinics, Blue Star franchises (600 Blue Star clinics in Ethiopia) and a call center that works nationwide. Before Marie Stopes entered Ethiopia, only 13% of the private sector clinics provided services in family planning yet the demand for contraceptives to space and limit children was and remains high. Only 29% of married women in Ethiopia are actively using contraceptives (Marie Stopes, Ethiopia) and an enormous unmet need exists for family planning.
Marie Stopes has filled this need by providing a call center and clinics that offer education, information and low-cost contraceptive options, pre and post natal care, HIV/AIDS prevention, diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted infections, and safe abortion when permitted, to woman and their families.
“Ethiopia is a much better place to be a mother today than when my mother gave birth”.
– Nurse Shewaye, the Central Area Manager for all Marie Stopes Clinics in Addis Ababa.
Another area that is helping save lives of women in Ethiopia and around the world is the provision of safe abortions.
Worldwide, one woman dies every 11 minutes from an unsafe abortion. Yet providing access to reproductive healthcare is one of the simplest and cheapest ways to save women’s lives. The World Health Organization (WHO), estimates that 5.5 million African women have an unsafe abortion every year. As many as 36,000 of these women die from the procedure, while millions more experience short- or long- term illness and disability. (Source: Guttmacher Institute)
In 2005, Ethiopia expanded its abortion law making abortion legal for cases of rape, incest, fetal impairment, and if the pregnancy or delivery endangers a woman’s life. A woman may also legally terminate a pregnancy if she is a minor or physically or mentally unable to raise a child. Despite the changes in the law, almost 6 in 10 abortions in Ethiopia are unsafe causing 13% of all maternal deaths.
Progress has been made yet continued expansion of affordable and accessible family planning and reproductive services is critically needed especially for rural women who represent 82% of all women of reproductive age in Ethiopia.
There are many reasons for pursuing an unsafe abortion however most of the time it is due to the false belief that it is the cheapest method while in fact many of these underground illegal abortions cost more than a safe one.
Furthermore, religion, fear and cultural issues are other reasons why women especially young and rural ones, will pursue an unsafe abortion and risk their lives.
The Make Women Matter Campaign
As the deadline for the Millennium Development Goals draws to a close, Marie Stopes International has launched a new campaign called Make Women Matter. The goal of the campaign is to ensure that maternal mortality remains at the top of the world agenda for future development goals. It also calls for achieving women’s rights and empowerment, universal access to sexual and reproductive health and rights, and ending unsafe abortion.
World leaders will be meeting in New York this September during UN Week to discuss the future of MDGs. To ensure that maternal health gets the critical attention it deserves, please spread the word by sharing this post. You can also personally make a difference by signing Marie Stopes petition at change.org by clicking here.
#makewomenmatter
I was in Ethiopia in June as a reporting fellow with the International Reporting Project. To see all my stories from the trip, click here.
References:
Material in this post was provided by Marie Stopes in Ethiopia and the UK. To learn more about Marie Stopes International, please visit their webpage here. #makewomenmatter
USAID, Achieving the MDGs: The Contribution of fulfilling the unmet need for family planning, Washington DC: Futures Group International, 2006.
Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health, Technical and Procedural Guidelines for Safe Abortion Services (2006)
Guttmacher Institute Ethiopia brief
The Millennium Development Goals Report 2014 – UN
So much progress and so much yet to be done. Thank you Nicole for your work in bringing awareness of this need for the health of women and infants of Ethiopia. Your posts leave me both heartened and heart wrenched.
You’re welcome Sue! I’m really glad you were moved by the post. 🙂
I have learned so much from your posts Nicole. Thanks for shining a light on a part of the world that many have forgotten.
Thanks LuAnn! That makes me feel good knowing that my posts have made an impact on you!
I find you to be an amazingly special young woman, if I haven’t told you before. 🙂
Oh you are way too sweet! 🙂 You are pretty awesome yourself! 🙂
Thanks Nicole! We are also finding your home state to be pretty awesome. We just finished a hike today along the Split Rock River and it was beautiful. 🙂
Ahh I love the Split Rock River! 🙂
We do too! 😀
I feel the same LuAnn does. Thank you for sharing and bringing the awareness of these places that you have traveled.
You’re welcome Amy! Thanks for all the support! 🙂
Congratulations and thank you Nicole for your inspiring posts. Best wishes 🙂
Thanks Andrew! I really appreciate your kind words and for sharing my work.
My absolute pleasure 🙂
Another informative post–keep it up. You are educating us.
Thanks Sally!
Thanks Nicole for the wonderful posts, it really touched my heart 🙂
Thanks so much for your kind words. Glad my post made an impact!
Excellent post, Nicole. So much work left to do, but even small steps is progress.
Thanks Angeline! I appreciate it! 🙂
This was very informative and eye-opening. Thanks for bringing this to my attention 🙂 Keep up the good work.
So glad you enjoyed the post. Thank you for stopping by and commenting.
Thank you for helping people to know the difficulties that women have to live with. Life can be so unfair.
You’re welcome Debra. Yes, so unfair is true. It is heartbreaking yet we mustn’t give up.
A really moving post, Nicole. The number of unsafe abortions is horrifying. Bless you for the work you do to help raise awareness about the plight of women in these countries.
Thanks! Yes it is very scary and I hope that things get better for these women. I can’t even begin to imagine.