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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category sexual and reproductive health.
  • COVID-19’s Pregnancy Paradox: Greater Disease Risk but Lower Vaccine Priority

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  Reading Radar  //  March 10, 2021  //  By Sara Matthews

    “Greater attention to pregnant patients as a unique population at higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection sequelae, is critical to preventing maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality,” write the authors of a study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology examining morbidity and mortality among pregnant women with COVID-19 in Washington state. The study found “markedly higher” hospitalization and fatality rates among this group compared with similarly-aged non-pregnant individuals.

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  • Reviving Culture Through First Nations Midwifery

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  March 5, 2021  //  By Hannah Chosid

    Mel Briggs podcast photo- 235p“It’s more than just clinical care. It’s cultural. It’s connection to country. It’s connection to land. It’s all of those things that are important to the woman and family, kinship, babies,” says Mel Briggs, a First Nations midwife in Australia, speaking about the importance of Aboriginal midwifery in this week’s Friday Podcast. Like her great-grandmother, Briggs followed the call to midwifery and finds joy in helping women and families “create really healthy, chunky, fat babies.”

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  • Turning Applause into Action: Investing in Women Leaders in Nursing and Midwifery

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    Dot-Mom  //  On the Beat  //  March 3, 2021  //  By Hannah Chosid
    Female,Healthcare,Colleagues,Standing,Outside,Hospital

    “Midwives and nurses contribute to the health of women, families, communities, and society at large, but the impact of their care goes much further… Their care is transformational,” said Diene Keita, Deputy Executive Director for Programmes at UNFPA. She spoke at a recent event hosted by Women in Global Health, which virtually convened nurses and midwives from around the world to celebrate 100 outstanding women nurse and midwife leaders from over 50 countries. The event occurred in honor of the Year of the Nurse and the Midwife, as designated by the World Health Organization (WHO). The list of 100 leaders is the first global recognition of its kind and commemorates women’s unique stories of resilience, leadership, and hard work.

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  • Native American Midwives Help Navajo Families Thrive

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  February 19, 2021  //  By Sara Matthews

    NG Navajo Midwifery 4x3When Navajo Midwife Nicolle Gonzales talks with Native American women about birth, there’s a sense something is missing, she said in this week’s Friday Podcast. “But,” she said, “we don’t know what it is.” Gonzales grew up and remains on a Navajo Reservation in New Mexico. She became a midwife and founded the Changing Woman Initiative (CWI) to address unmet maternal health care needs in her community. She is of the Tl’aashchi’I, Red Bottom clan, born for Tachii’nii, Red Running into the Water clan, Hashk’aa hadzohi, Yucca fruit-strung-out-in-a line clan, and Naasht’ezhi dine’e, Zuni clan.

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  • What Does a Biden-Harris White House Mean for Women and Girls? Everything.

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    Dot-Mom  //  January 15, 2021  //  By Sarah B. Barnes
    Biden Harris WH photo

    The significance of the Biden-Harris administration for the world’s women and girls cannot be overstated. The current status of women and girls is grim. The COVID-19 pandemic and four years of dangerous policies designed to strip women and girls of their reproductive and economic autonomy and punish them—first for their biology, and second for their gender—have slowed and even reversed decades of progress toward gender equity. Systemic racism and policies meant to further exclude and disenfranchise minority communities have targeted women of color with tragic results.

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  • Factor Housing into Maternal and Neonatal Health Policy

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  January 13, 2021  //  By Sara Matthews
    SM Housing insecurity photo

    The United States is facing a crucial moment, one in which more pregnant women are at risk of becoming housing insecure than at any other time in recent history. This leaves an unprecedented number of mothers and babies vulnerable to the associated adverse health risks.  Housing instability – which includes challenges ranging from struggles paying rent to chronic homelessness – harms maternal and neonatal health as much as smoking during pregnancy. The economic effects of COVID-19 threaten to exacerbate the adverse health outcomes associated with homelessness.

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  • Midwife-Delivered Interventions Could Provide Dramatic Benefits

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  December 11, 2020  //  By Hannah Chosid

    podcast photos_nsb1In a year that has presented enormous challenges, it is even more gratifying to present evidence that strengthens the importance of midwives as providers of essential sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services and the impact they can have on maternal and neonatal mortality and stillbirths, said Anneka Knutsson, Chief of the SRH Branch at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) at a recent Wilson Center event, in partnership with UNFPA and Johnson & Johnson, to launch the Impact of Midwives study conducted by UNFPA, the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), and the World Health Organization (WHO) and published in The Lancet Global Health.

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  • More Midwife-based Interventions Could Save Millions of Lives

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  December 9, 2020  //  By Sara Matthews
    12-2 event summary photo

    “This is real,” said Franka Cadée, President of the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM). “And we can no longer get around it. And we can no longer linger.” She spoke at a recent Wilson Center event, in partnership with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and Johnson & Johnson, launching a new study, Impact of Midwives, published in The Lancet Global Health. If any other intervention could have the same impact as midwives or midwifery, it would be implemented worldwide immediately, she said.

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