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Tuesday, Mar 6 2012

World Bank Should Re-Evaluate Programs To Reduce Maternal Mortality

"The World Bank boasts that it has positioned itself as a 'global leader' in reproductive health, especially for youth and the poor," but in 2011, it dedicated "just 0.2 percent of its $43 billion budget" to reproductive health projects, and much of that money was provided as loans, which can "leave poor countries indebted and threaten to divert domestic spending away from vital public health services," Elizabeth Arend, program coordinator at Gender Action, writes in the Guardian's "Poverty Matters Blog." In addition, "[t]here is a striking mismatch between countries' maternal mortality rates and the bank's spending on reproductive health," Arend states, citing the examples of Sierra Leone, where the lifetime average risk of dying from pregnancy or childbirth is one in 35 and the World Bank provides $7.43 per person, versus Niger, Liberia, or Somalia, where women "face an average lifetime one in 17 risk of maternal death, yet these countries receive no reproductive health funding from the bank at all."
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