| 13 Octobre 2016
 13 OCTOBER 2016 | GENEVA – The World Health  Organization and partners are calling for an end to the discrimination,  harassment and lack of respect that hinder midwives’ ability to provide  quality care to women and newborns.
13 OCTOBER 2016 | GENEVA – The World Health  Organization and partners are calling for an end to the discrimination,  harassment and lack of respect that hinder midwives’ ability to provide  quality care to women and newborns.
 
 “It’s time to recognize the pivotal role midwives play in keeping  mothers and newborns alive,” says Dr Anthony Costello, Director of  Maternal, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health at WHO. “Their voices have  gone unheard for too long, and too often they have been denied a seat at  the decision-making table.”
 
 The first global survey of midwifery personnel led by the World Health  Organization, the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) and  White Ribbon Alliance (WRA), Midwives’ Voices, Midwives Realities:  Findings from a global consultation on providing quality midwifery care,  reports findings from 2400 midwives who chose to complete an online  survey in 93 countries and was funded by the United States Agency for  International Development (USAID).
 
 It reveals that too often midwives report their efforts are constrained  by unequal power relations within the health system. Many midwives also  face cultural isolation, unsafe accommodation and low salaries.
 
 The organizations highlight the need to provide midwives with  professional support (including better working conditions); stronger  education and regulatory environments; and stronger advocacy around  midwifery.
 
 Every year, more than 300 000 women die while giving birth and 2.7  million newborns die during the first 28 days of life, many from  preventable causes. Midwifery – the skilled, knowledgeable and  compassionate care provided throughout pregnancy and childbirth – plays a  vital role in preventing these deaths, but only when it is of quality  and provided by midwives educated and regulated to international  standards.
 
 The challenges midwives face
 “Just as we are all committed to the highest quality care for all women,  newborns and their families, so must we be united in our fervour to  ensure that the midwifery workforce is supported by quality education,  regulation, and safe working conditions,” says Frances Ganges, ICM Chief  Executive.
 “Midwives must be respected, compensated and valued as equally as other professionals.
 
 One-fifth of midwives who answered the online survey depend on another  source of income to survive, which adds to the pressure and exhaustion  that they experience. Many combine the roles of work, motherhood and  caring for others in their communities. The midwives reported that long  and stressful hours badly affected their families, with over one-third   stating they had no choice but to leave children under 14 years alone  while they work.
 
 Though most feel they are treated with respect, many midwives reported  harassment at work, a lack of security and fear of violence. Disrespect  in the workplace negatively affects midwives’ self-esteem and their  ability to provide quality care to mothers and babies worldwide.
 Professionally, many midwives are neither provided with adequate   education, nor regulatory and legal support . Few national midwifery  associations get the support they need to develop leadership skills.  This lack of investment reinforces gender inequality and unequal power  relations within the health system.
 
 What needs to change: 
 The partners responsible for the survey are highlighting the urgent need  to address the challenges so many midwives face. Key steps include:
 
 1. Provision of professional support. To improve working conditions for  midwives and quality of care for women and newborns, midwifery  professionals need salaries that adequately reflect the level of their  skills and responsibilities, health insurance and social security  systems, professional support networks, good living environments and  counselling services.
 
 2. Better education and regulation. The report includes recommendations  to strengthen education and regulatory environments around midwifery.  Nine out of ten respondents think that recognition of midwives by the  health service is important for changes to take place.
 
 3. Advocacy for midwifery. Based on the findings of the survey, WHO,  ICM, WRA, USAID, UNFPA and other partners are developing a Global  Midwifery Advocacy Strategy aimed at addressing the barriers midwifery  personnel face in order to improve quality of care. The strategy will  urge global decision makers to value the evidence on the positive impact  of quality midwifery care. It will encourage policy makers to draw on  the expertise of midwives when making policy and strategy decisions that  affect maternal and newborn care.
 “Midwives are essential to providing quality, respectful maternal and  newborn care. They are able to prevent and manage many complications of  pregnancy and birth and play a crucial role in ending preventable child  and maternal deaths,” says Dr Ariel Pablos-Méndez, Assistant  Administrator for Global Health and Child and Maternal Survival  Coordinator, USAID. “USAID is committed to supporting and empowering  their important role on the frontlines of health systems.”
 
 “If we are to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, we must value  and support midwives,” says Betsy McCallon, CEO, White Ribbon Alliance.  “Midwives are directly responsible for providing reproductive, maternal  and newborn health services, yet they are largely absent or ignored from  designing policies and programs at all levels. Today, we stand with  midwives to call for investment in and respect for midwives and  midwifery so that all women receive the quality and dignified care they  deserve.”
 Link to report:
 
 http://who.int/maternal_child_adolescent/documents/midwives-voices-realities/en/index.html









