Photo: Hannah McNeish/IRIN. Choice, not chance
Source: IRIN
JUBA, 14 November 2012 (IRIN) - Cut off from development by five decades
of civil war, South Sudan has the highest maternal mortality rate in
the world and high levels of infant mortality and morbidity. Large
families struggle to get by in the war-ravaged new nation.
With the help of aid agencies providing family planning services to
bolster a fledgling healthcare system, women and families are starting
to choose life for the first time.
At Gurei clinic on the outskirts of the capital, Juba, women crowd into a
makeshift shelter set up to give talks on birth spacing and limiting.
Shushing babies and quieting older children, women who never knew there
was a way to control when they arrived are engrossed as health workers
explain methods from condoms and pills to inter-uterine devices and
hormone implants.
"Some women are just lucky - they don't get their periods and so they
stop reproducing for a few years… but not me, I suffer from very quick
reproduction," said 21-year-old Jennifer Yeno.
A new concept
She had the first of her three children when she was 15, much like 5
percent of girls that are already mothers by that age; 16 percent are
married off early. In South Sudan, a 15-year-old girl is also more
likely to die in childbirth than complete her education.
Mother of five Lily Juwa Sisa says she had her first child at 13. She
was married off early and had to drop out of school as her father died.
Worries that she will be again left destitute in a game where women are
often treated as disposable pawns, she recently got a contraceptive
implant.
"I lost my husband and so that's why I need this. I have a new husband
and I am not sure whether he is ready to settle with me or not," she
told IRIN. "He doesn't have enough money to have more children, but the
little we have we can share," but only before her girls "have an
education", so as not to be left dependent like her.
"Let me first see the future - that's why it's very important for me to choose," she added.
Sisa also worries that she could have complications after a difficult
last birth of twins that required an emergency Cesarean section.
Yeno says she may want more children in the future, but for the next
five years the hormonal implant in her arm will make sure her family can
grow at a rate that she and her husband have the energy and money for.
"People who reproduce with the gaps between children, they are ever
happy," she said. "When I go back to my place, whoever has the same
system of reproducing quickly, I will tell her she is able to come here
and get the same system I have."
The average woman in South Sudan has 6.7 children and the population is
growing at 3 percent a year, with returnees also pouring in since a 2005
peace deal ended decades of civil war and a 2011 referendum secured
independence.
Despite an abundance of aid to the new nation, hopes that improved
education and health will bring down child and maternal mortality rates
will take time to be realized.
Jude Omal, clinical officer for family planning NGO Marie Stopes
International (MSI), which provides family planning services at clinics
like Gurei, says a shortage of clinics and trained health professionals
are major hindrances to women's access to family planning.
"There are some health facilities which don't provide the basic reproductive services like delivery," he said.
Health risks
At Gurei clinic, pregnant women pack the benches and floor outside the
three-room clinic while doctors jostle for space to examine and consult
mothers-to-be. Many will need to be referred to Juba's only, and also
poorly staffed, public hospital, where three of the country's eight
registered midwives work.
Data from 2008 suggests that over 2000 women die for every 100,000
births, and that even these figures could have been understated due to
the remoteness of South Sudan and lack of records.
"If you produce too much, you are more prone to birth-related
complications because you will not get access to well-trained staff, so
these family planning services are valuable to both communities and the
government," said Omal.
MSI currently only runs three centres and does outreach work at clinics
in South Sudan's three southern Equatoria states, where most of those
returning from abroad, Khartoum and East Africa have settled. It hopes
to expand its client base of roughly 3,000 northwards through word of
mouth of satisfied customers.
In these more remote and conservative areas that rely almost wholly on
subsistence farming and cattle keeping, harsher climates and lack of
infrastructure have kept the outside world out. There, and in other
rural parts of the Equatorias, the only methods communities are using
are that men refrain from sex with their wives until a child is of
walking age.
John Okech, a medical officer for NGO Adventist Development and Relief
Agency (ADRA), says birth spacing is important for South Sudanese women
to prevent anaemia, a condition many die of during labour or through
past-partum haemorrhaging.
"Some mothers when they want to deliver they die because of obstructed
or prolonged labour," says mother of three Milka John, who was aware
that having babies in quick succession was dangerous but never knew how
to stop. "Women keep producing as many of them are not informed."
Often it is out of their control, in a male-dominated society where women have few rights over their lives.
John says she did not get permission before opting for a five-year
implant as her policeman husband’s salary "can't take care of us at
home".
“I didn't ask my husband, as he would refuse definitely. The husband
would say, `Let her just continue delivering'. But I want to have some
rest so I can be a bit healthier," she explained. "It's important as it
will enable me to take care of the children, make sure they go to school
and get an education."
"I want to take care of these three first, and if they grow well and the interest comes then I will produce," she added.
"Typically in South Sudan, where food is scarce, breastfeeding is vital
to a baby's nutrition," said ADRA's Okech. "Without spacing the birth,
the children will be getting malnutrition, not good feeding, as...
[they] should be getting breastfeeding up until at least two years."
Economic hardship
But health risks aside, economic factors in South Sudan - one of the
poorest countries in the world with no welfare system, high unemployment
and high levels of insecurity - endanger the lives of women and
children. South Sudan's economy has plummeted since the government
decided in January to shut down oil production, cutting off 98 percent
of its revenue.
Okech says many families are opting for birth control because they cannot afford to feed, clothe and educate more children.
"It helps the child and then it helps even the family - it helps them
with the education and health of the children for economic reasons," he
said. "The women complain mostly of their husbands, as the husbands
actually don't allow for the women to take the family planning measures,
so the women decide by themselves sometimes."
In a largely pastoralist country that prizes big families, men are
slowly coming round to the idea that small families also have a value.
"Most mothers who prefer these methods, it is related to economics,
because they realize that we are in a very challenging economic
situation, where if you produce many children in this challenging
environment you may not have the money to take care of the children, to
feed them," said MSI's Omal. "And also some husbands, because they have
challenges in terms of remuneration, the salary that they are getting...
they want the right number of children that they can take care of."
Showdowns at outreach clinics between staff and angry husbands not
consulted still occur, but health workers say that as awareness grows,
they will fade.
"This service is voluntary. We don't force mothers, and we always
encourage mothers who want to have this, to go and seek consent from
their husbands," Omal added.