Mothers have always overcome great challenges and centered their
biggest decisions around improving the lives of the next
generation. They inspired us to do the same.
Over the last 10
years, mothers everywhere have sparked our efforts, powered our
innovations and fueled the momentum that has delivered
life-changing solutions to communities around the world.
Mothers have always overcome great challenges and centered their
biggest decisions around improving the lives of the next
generation. They inspired us to do the same.
Over the last 10
years, mothers everywhere have sparked our efforts, powered our
innovations and fueled the momentum that has delivered
life-changing solutions to communities around the world. Mothers
refuse to give up, and so do we.
Advancing Quality of Care Standards in India
Unlocking A Game-Changing Option for Postpartum Hemorrhage Prevention
Supporting Respectful High-Quality Maternity Care in Brazil
Image Credit: Google
Innovative Financing for Improved Outcomes
Centering the Voices of Mothers
Explore our ten-year journey to help create a world where no woman has to die while giving life.
Excessive bleeding after childbirth, also known as postpartum hemorrhage (PPH), is the number one cause of preventable death related to pregnancy and childbirth. for Mothers, Ferring Pharmaceuticals and the World Health Organization (WHO) formed a public-private collaboration to tackle this global health issue by conducting the largest clinical trial in PPH prevention. The CHAMPION trial results catalyzed accelerated recognition of heat-stable carbetocin as a new alternative for the prevention of PPH. This formulation of carbetocin was essential because it could be used in lower-middle income countries, where the refrigeration of medicines can be difficult to maintain. After almost a decade of collaboration, women in India were among the first in the world to receive heat-stable carbetocin in July 2021. for Mothers continues to support efforts to strengthen innovations to prevent PPH and help end maternal mortality.
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Approximately 810 women die every day from preventable causes related to pregancy and childbirth
Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is the number one cause of preventable death related to pregnancy and childbirth in lower middle-income contries
30,000 women participated in the CHAMPION (Cabetocin Hemorrhage Prevention) trial
CHAMPION trial started
CHAMPION results published in New England Journal of Medicine
Heat-stable carbetocin added to the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines
Heat-stable carbetocin received Swissmedic regulatory approval for the prevention of PPH
Women in India were the first in the world to receive heat-stable carbetocin formulation
APRIL 2014
JUNE 2018
JULY 2019
MAY 2020
JULY 2021
The MOMs Initiative was launched in June 2019 by the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), for Mothers, Credit Suisse and USAID to stimulate, advance and scale innovations that contribute to a healthy pregnancy and safe childbirth — laying the foundation for lifelong health for women, children and communities. This cross-sector initiative demonstrates how investing in creative solutions can help save the lives of expecting mothers in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. To date, as part of the MOMs Initiative, Merck for Mothers has invested in LifeBank, Penda Health, Jacaranda Maternity and Unjani Clinics with additional investments planned.
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Since 2020, LifeBank helped save
LIVES
UNITS
Penda health partnered with 3 maternity hospitals in Nairobi to build a data-driven referral network for labor and delivery so mothers can safely give birth at high quality facilities
Unjani Clinics, a network of
BLACK WOMEN
Owned and Operated Primary Care Clinics
provides accessible, affordable, quality healthcare to communities in underserved areas in South Africa and aims to expand to over
CLINICS
by the end of 2021, creating
SUSTAINABLE JOBS FOR WOMEN
and reduce more than
PATIENT ENGAGEMENTS
annually on the public health system.
Jacaranda Maternity, a pioneer in patient-centered, high quality, affordable maternity care in Nairobi, aims to scale from 1 hospital to 10 hospitals across Kenya.
Through grants to the Sociedade Beneficente Israelita Brasileira Hospital Albert Einstein, for Mothers supported the development and implementation of the Maternal Mortality Reduction Project Abraço de Mãe (Mother’s Hug) and Projeto Parto Adequado (Project Appropriate Birth). Both programs aimed to improve the quality of maternity care across public and private hospitals in Brazil, with focus on addressing systemic racial bias that adversely impacts care and outcomes for Black and Indigenous women. Participating hospitals worked to reduce maternal mortality through the lens of anti-racism, empowering hospital teams with a better understanding of structural racism and connecting with community groups with lived experience, mothers and health care providers to create a more equitable system.
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MATERNAL MORTALITY REDUCTION PROJECT
Abraço de Mãe
municipalities impacted with the training of
health professionals in updated maternity care protocols and procedures
Women Reached with Improved Quality Care
decline in maternal mortality rate related to sepsis, hemorrhage and hypertension at the 19 implementing public maternity hospitals in 7 states across Brazil, surpassing the project’s goal of 30% reduction
In September of 2011, Merck for Mothers began its mission by joining the UN and collaborators around the globe to apply its scientific and business expertise to help save women’s lives, aligned with Sustainable Development Goal 3.1 to reduce the global mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 births by 2030. Over the last 10 years, Merck for Mothers has been committed to taking a holistic approach to addressing the many factors that impact maternal health focused on advancing high-quality maternity care, harnessing innovations for maternal health and catalyzing solutions that respond to local needs. To learn more, explore our ten-year journey to help create a world where no woman has to die while giving life.
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In Greece, following years of recession and a surge in refugee arrivals, nearly one-third of the population lacked health care coverage and many suffered from little to no access to quality maternity care. Through the Mother & Child project, Doctors of the World’s Greek delegation deployed mobile health units so that refugee women and women in remote regions could have access to the maternal health services they need and strengthened the capacity of health care providers.
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In the United States, over 700 women die each year from complications related to pregnancy or childbirth and nearly two-thirds of these pregnancy-related deaths could be prevented. Through a grant to the CDC Foundation, for Mothers supported the creation of the Center for Disease Control’s Hear Her campaign. Hear Her seeks to raise awareness of potentially life-threatening warning signs during and after pregnancy, improve communication between patients and their health care providers and encourage anyone who supports pregnant and postpartum women to really listen to mothers and help take actions that could save their lives.
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Nigeria has the largest number of maternal deaths globally, accounting for over 20% of all maternal deaths annually. Through the Saving Mothers, Giving Life Initiative, Merck for Mothers and Pathfinder International helped expand access to high-quality, comprehensive maternity care and strengthened linkages between more than 100 local public and private facilities in Cross River State. The result was a 66% reduction in maternal mortality in three years, due in part to close collaboration among communities, providers and state health officials within the mixed health system.
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In South Africa, the Foundation for Professional Development and University of Pretoria led a training program for emergency medical service staff, nurses and local clinicians to improve their skills, knowledge and the quality of services they provide to pregnant women, emphasizing respectful care. The collaboration focused on improving the quality of emergency care for mothers experiencing obstetric complications and reducing maternal and neonatal mortality through standardized care and management during inter-facility transportation.
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Between 1990-2016,
India’s maternal mortality rate dropped by 77% from 556 to 130 deaths per 100,000 live births. Despite these gains, however, the country still has the second highest number of maternal deaths per year globally.
Adequate and consistent delivery of clinical and patient-centered care are ongoing challenges in India. A number of accreditation bodies prescribe quality health care standards, but the majority of private health care facilities, where nearly half of mothers in India deliver, do not require adherence to the competency-based clinical care standards that have been identified as key to the prevention of maternal mortality. In addition, there are few options for private providers to improve quality.
To address disparities in quality across a mixed health care system, the Federation of Obstetric and Gynaecological Societies of India, or FOGSI, in partnership with international health non-profit Jhpiego and with financial support from Merck for Mothers and the MacArthur Foundation, launched a quality improvement certification program for private facilities called Manyata.
Watch the videos above to learn more about how Manyata works to ensure that women receive quality care wherever they seek care. More than just a simple checklist, at scale the program could establish a minimum standard of quality for India’s private maternal health care providers.
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