Source: IRIN
or every 100,000 births in South Sudan, more than 2,000 mothers die.
Ninety percent of women give birth away from formal medical facilities
and without the help of professionally trained assistants.
One of the main causes of South Sudan’s high maternal mortality
rate is a dearth of qualified birth attendants: during the civil wars
that raged since the mid-1950s conducting the necessary formal medical
training was all but impossible.
Now, seven years after a peace accord was signed, and a year after South
Sudan gained independence from Sudan, things are beginning to change.
IRIN’s latest film, South Sudan - Birth of Nation,
focuses on Juba Teaching Hospital’s new college of nursing and
midwifery. Students here, drawn from all of the country’s 17 states,
speak of their determination to take their new skills back to their
villages to reduce the scourge of maternal mortality.
View Film