RETURN TO MAIN PAGE // Archive for the ‘Mother's Day Every Day Campaign’ Category

Every Day is Mother’s Day


May 12th, 2009 9:30 PM EST
By Margaret McDonnell

The Mother’s Day Every Day Campaign (led by the White Ribbon Alliance and CARE), and the Huffington Post ran a great Mother’s Day blog series recently with a post by Helene Gayle and Theresa Shaver. (You can check out others in the series here).

Excerpts from the Gayle/Shaver piece below:

The recent and rapid global response to the threat of a swine flu pandemic has shown us what world leaders can do if they have the will power. We applaud the steps that were taken, including by the Obama Administration and the International Monetary Fund. Their swift mobilization of resources, providing assistance to the Mexican government and informing the public about steps to prevent the spread of infection undoubtedly saved lives. Thankfully, at this time, it appears that reported cases were fewer than 2,000 with 48 deaths worldwide.

Meanwhile, as has been true for the last two decades, every minute somewhere in the world a woman dies in childbirth. Every year, 536,000 families, 99 percent living in developing regions, are left devastated by the tragic and incalculable loss of a daughter, a wife, a mother.

Why — despite repeated pledges by world leaders and international consensus on proven success strategies — have the numbers of women dying needlessly in pregnancy and childbirth virtually remained the same as the 1980s?

-Margaret McDonnell

Countdown to Mother’s Day: Thursday Edition


May 7th, 2009 12:52 PM EST
By Margaret McDonnell

The Mother’s Day Every Day Campaign (led by the White Ribbon Alliance and CARE), and the Huffington Post continue their “Mother’s Day Every Day for Healthier Families, Communities and Nations” blog series this week with a post by Amb. Mark Dybul, and a post by Sarah Brown.

Excerpts from Mark Dybul’s post, full piece here:

Some of us in the United States might be preparing to celebrate Mother’s Day with a backyard party and are worried about pesky mosquitoes after rains across the country. We should consider ourselves lucky to view mosquitoes as pests: in much of the world, mosquitoes cause malaria and malaria causes around 500 million illnesses and more than 1 million deaths each year.

Malaria is particularly devastating in Africa, where it kills a child every 30 seconds — several by the time you finish reading this posting. Pregnant women are particularly vulnerable because pregnancy reduces a woman’s immunity to malaria, making her more susceptible to infection and increasing the risk of illness, severe anemia and death. For the child, maternal malaria increases the risk of stillbirth, premature delivery and low birth weight. And 80 percent of malaria deaths are among children under 5. Malaria is a major cause of maternal and child death.

Excerpts from Sarah Brown’s post, full piece here:

I’m starting to see more and more discussion on the blogs and in women’s magazines about third wave feminism. It’s like those of us lucky enough to benefit from our mother’s efforts to urge and discover greater freedoms for women are suddenly all thinking ’so now what?’

For me, the discussions of new feminism give us a chance to talk about one of the great insights of the old sort: that women without economic power in the end tend to be denied social, political and personal power too. So if we seriously want our century to be a women’s one, we need to think about what injustices remain for women in the developing world.

I listened recently to the group of African First Ladies gathered together for a health summit in the US and watched them work out how to build their programs and figure out how to put maternal health at the heart of what they do. They recognized readily that this is the keystone to addressing everything else. At some point we must change how we measure our existing work – our programs for international development, for education for all, for combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and polio, for economic empowerment and cultural change. We need to know how well we are doing on maternal mortality, or we won’t know how well we are doing in bringing real justice.

-Margaret McDonnell

Countdown to Mother’s Day


May 6th, 2009 9:27 AM EST
By Margaret McDonnell

The Mother’s Day Every Day Campaign (led by the White Ribbon Alliance and CARE), and the Huffington Post continue their “Mother’s Day Every Day for Healthier Families, Communities and Nations” blog series this week with this post by Representative Lois Capps:

Excerpts below, full piece here

Each May, we celebrate and honor mothers. The treasure of motherhood is something that people of every political philosophy and walk of life can agree on. But despite this veneration of motherhood, giving birth can still be dangerous, especially in places where it is difficult to access healthcare.

Every minute of every day, a woman somewhere in the world dies as a result of pregnancy or childbirth–amounting to more than half a million fatalities each year. In developing nations, a woman’s lifetime risk of dying from reproductive problems is as high as one in seven, and problems with pregnancy and childbirth are the leading cause of the disease burden among women.

But the problem is far from isolated to the developing world. While the average risk of a woman dying in childbirth is 1 in 8000 for industrialized countries, the risk in the United States is much higher: 1 in 4800. In fact, the U.S. ranks 41st in the world in terms of maternal mortality.

-Margaret McDonnell, US NGO Partnerships & Faith Relations Team

Countdown to Mother’s Day


May 5th, 2009 2:40 PM EST
By Margaret McDonnell

The Huffington Post has joined with the Mother’s Day Every Day Campaign (led by the White Ribbon Alliance and CARE) in the global movement to call upon world leaders to invest in health workers and strengthen health systems. These are necessary to ensure that every day, everywhere in the world, all women and newborns have access to lifesaving care. Every day until Mother’s Day will feature a post from the campaign advisory committee members and global champions such as Donna Shalala, Ann Venemen, UK First Lady Sarah Brown, Liya Kebede, Theresa Shaver and Helene Gayle.

Check out the first post “Leading the Way to Make Mothers Day Every Day” by Secretary Donna Shalala and UNICEF Director Ann Veneman.

Excerpts below, full piece here

On this Mother’s Day, we celebrate the women around the world who gave us life. We appreciate the untold sacrifices they made so we could be healthy and happy. We recognize all that they have done outside our families to build better, safer and more prosperous communities, nations and world.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the resource-poor developing countries where women play a critical role in breaking the cycle of poverty.

Unfortunately, many women and their families in these parts of the world don’t have much to celebrate this Mother’s Day. The loss of life from complications related to pregnancy and childbirth continues at alarming rates.

Every minute a woman from these regions dies in pregnancy or childbirth. Last year, that totaled more than 536,000 women, leaving behind families devastated by a loss that in most cases could have been prevented. But the tragedy doesn’t stop there. Last year, more than 3.7 million newborns died, 75 percent within seven days of birth. They, too, would almost always survive, if there was access to basic health care services that we often take for granted here in the United States.

-Margaret McDonnell, US NGO Partnerships & Faith Relations Team

One Blog

Popular Posts This Month

About the Blog

The ONE Blog is a daily log of the anti-poverty movement. The site is operated by ONE staff, with frequent contributions from volunteers, members and partner organizations.

The ONE Blog updates readers daily with the latest in global development news and analysis and what ONE members and our partners are doing around the world to influence world leaders in the fight against global poverty.

The content of each post and each comment represents the views of that author and does not necessarily reflect the views of ONE or ONE Action. ONE does not support or oppose any candidate for elected office, and any post expressing support or opposition for a candidate is not endorsed by ONE.