| 06 Mai 2014
GENEVA / NEW YORK | 6 May 2014 – New United Nations* data show a 45% reduction in maternal deaths  since 1990. An estimated 289 000 women died in 2013 due to complications  in pregnancy and childbirth, down from 523 000 in 1990.
 
 Another World Health Organization (WHO) study, also published today in The Lancet Global Health, adds new knowledge about why these women are dying. Global causes of maternal death: a WHO systematic analysis,  finds that more than 1 in 4 maternal deaths are caused by pre-existing  medical conditions such as diabetes, HIV, malaria and obesity, whose  health impacts can all be aggravated by pregnancy. This is similar to  the proportion of deaths during pregnancy and childbirth from severe  bleeding.
 
 “Together, the two reports highlight the need to invest in proven  solutions, such as quality care for all women during pregnancy and  childbirth, and particular care for pregnant women with existing medical  conditions,” says Dr Flavia Bustreo, Assistant Director-General,  Family, Women’s and Children’s Health, WHO.
 
 They also underscore the importance of having accurate data.
 
 "Thirty-three maternal deaths per hour is 33 too many," said Tim Evans,  Director, Health, Nutrition and Population, World Bank Group. "We need  to document every one of these tragic events, determine their cause, and  initiate corrective actions urgently."
 
 Steady progress
 
 Trends in maternal mortality estimates 1990 to 2013 includes new data which were not captured in the last set of global  estimates in 2012, as well as improved methods of estimating births and  all female deaths.
 
 Eleven countries that had high levels of maternal mortality in 1990  (Bhutan, Cambodia, Cabo Verde, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea,  Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Maldives, Nepal, Romania, Rwanda,  Timor-Leste) have already reached the Millennium Development Goal (MDG)  target of a 75% reduction in maternal mortality from the 1990 rate by  2015. Based on these latest trends however, many low- and middle-income  countries will not achieve this goal.
 
 Sub-Saharan Africa is still the riskiest region in the world for dying of complications in pregnancy and childbirth.
 
 “A 15-year-old girl living in sub-Saharan Africa faces about a 1 in 40  risk of dying during pregnancy and childbirth during her lifetime,” says  Dr Geeta Rao Gupta, Deputy Executive Director, United Nations  Children’s Fund (UNICEF). “A girl of the same age living in Europe has a  lifetime risk of 1 in 3300 – underscoring how uneven progress has been  around the world.”
 
 Despite advances in the last 20 years, there has been too little  progress in preventing adolescent pregnancies, abortions, maternal  deaths, sexually-transmitted infections and HIV, and there are  significant gaps in availability, quality and access to comprehensive  sexuality education and services for young people, especially in  low-income countries.
 
 “More than 15 million girls aged 15 to 19 years give birth every year –  one in five girls before they turn 18 – and many of these pregnancies  result from non-consensual sex,” highlights Ms Kate Gilmore, Deputy  Executive Director, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). “Relatively  simple and well-known interventions, like midwifery services and  gender-based violence prevention and response, can make a huge  difference if scaled up and coupled with investments in innovations,  especially in the area of contraceptives.”
 
 New information on causes of death
 
 A related WHO study of causes of more than 60 000 maternal deaths in 115  countries shows that pre-existing medical conditions exacerbated by  pregnancy (such as diabetes, malaria, HIV, obesity) caused 28% of the  deaths.
 
 Other causes included:
 
 Strong health systems – with facilities that have adequate health  workers and equipment and medicines – are key to delivering quality  health care to save the lives of women and their newborn babies.
 
 “The new data show a changing profile in the conditions that cause  maternal deaths; reflecting the increasing burden of noncommunicable  diseases in women throughout the world. Ending preventable maternal  deaths will require both continued efforts to reduce complications  directly related to pregnancy, and more of a focus on noncommunicable  diseases and their effect in pregnancy. Integrated care for women with  conditions like diabetes and obesity will reduce deaths and prevent  long-lasting health problems,” says Dr Marleen Temmerman, Director,  Reproductive Health and Research, WHO, and co-author of the study.
 
 Better data needed to save lives
 
 A major challenge in addressing maternal deaths is the lack of accurate  data. Although knowledge on the number of women dying and the reasons  behind their deaths is improving, much remains unrecorded and  unreported. In many low-income countries, maternal deaths go uncounted  and frequently the cause of death is unknown or not recorded correctly,  particularly when women die at home. This is consistent with general  global trends: only one-third of all deaths worldwide are recorded and  fewer than 100 countries record the cause of death using WHO’s  International Classification of Disease.
 
 As a result, it is often hard for national health programmes to allocate  resources where they are needed most. This is why the United Nations  Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s  Health is calling for better measurement of maternal and child deaths.  The Commission requires that “by 2015, all countries have taken  significant steps to establish a system for registration of births,  deaths and causes of death”.
 
 There is growing consensus worldwide that ending preventable maternal  deaths can be achieved by ensuring that every woman has access to  quality health care. Global and national targets beyond 2015 will be  important for tracking progress in reducing maternal deaths and ensuring  that maternal health continues to be a global development priority.
 
 Highlights from Trends in maternal mortality estimates 1990 to 2013: