1.
Various of exteriors of
Jude Anne maternity hospital run by
Doctors Without Borders
2. Pan of ward with pregnant women in beds
3. Various of heavily pregnant women sitting outside doctor's office
4. SOUNDBITE: (
English)
Wendy Lai, Obstetrician:
"What we are trying to do here is reduce maternal mortality in
Haiti, the highest in the
Western hemisphere. So we are trying to take women who are (have) the most complicated pregnancies and deliver them safely."
5. Wide of delivery room, women on delivery tables
6.
Doctor and nurse with pregnant woman, fitting a drip
7.
Nurse taking blood pressure of pregnant woman
8. Nurse next to another woman on bed
9. Nurse writing notes
10. Close-up of notes
11.
Pregnant woman leaving office
12.
Women in delivery room
13. SOUNDBITE: (English) Wendy Lai, Obstetrician:
"The reason they're difficult every year is that here in Haiti there is an annual peak of births that happen:
October, November.
It's said to be because it's nine months after carnival and certainly there is that seasonal increase."
14. Various of Jean-Francoise
Marie Lucet on delivery table
15. Close-up of nurse attending to woman
16. Various of new born babies
17. Wide of ward, women sleeping
18.
Woman breast feeding baby
19. Woman with her baby
20. Wide of babies in their cots
21. Close-up of newborn baby
STORYLINE:
Giving birth is dangerous business for Haiti's poor, who suffer the highest maternal mortality rate in the
Western Hemisphere.
Some 630 of every 100-thousand women died of pregnancy-related causes in
2006 - more than five times the
Latin American and
Caribbean average, according to the
United Nations.
The problem appears to be simple: millions of women either cannot access health care, or cannot afford it.
Haitian health officials made significant strides last year (2008) with a program to waive entrance fees - the equivalent of 25 to 64 cents a day - for pregnant mothers at public hospitals.
But the women must pay for almost everything else, from doctors' gloves and syringes to medicine, food and transportation.
The situation turned critical last year (2008) when Port-au-Prince's public hospitals went on strike during the fall peak birthing season - nine months after
Carnival.
With mothers forced to turn to a handful of not-for-profits, the cramped, 66-bed Jude Anne maternity hospital run by Doctors Without Borders
Holland in central Port-au-Prince became, in the words of obstetrician
Dr. Wendy Lai, a "war zone."
Women were giving birth on the floor, in the waiting room, on staircases and in bathrooms, she said.
One died before doctors, caught up with other life-threatening emergencies, could attend to her.
Doctors Without Borders recently moved to a larger facility after two and a half years in a building so cramped, doctors could not walk around some patients' beds.
Conditions are still basic, with overcrowded delivery rooms filled with women in labour.
But the facility provides critical care for expectant mothers, many of whom face difficult births.
"
We are trying to take women who are the most complicated pregnancies and deliver them safely," said
Doctors Lai.
Some of the mothers sing to get through the pain.
Jean-Francoise Marie Lucet was one of the women who started to shout in the delivery room.
After just a few minutes of pushing and screaming, Lucet gave birth to a son who weighed a healthy 7.16 pounds.
The baby was her second - the first had died a year before after suddenly losing weight.
Haitian mothers are disproportionately threatened by the disorders of eclampsia and pre-eclampsia, which bring high blood pressure, excess protein and swelling, and can cause seizures, heart failure, brain hemorrhages and death.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
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