Family Care International (Part 2)

By: Kathleen J. King (View Profile)

This is Part 2 of a two-part interview with President Jill Sheffield of Family Care International.

Can you tell me about the origins of the global conference Women Deliver?

Women Deliver is something that’s grown out of all this work. Women Deliver is a totally new concept based on a twenty-year-old idea. The idea was that we could and we would reduce maternal mortality. In the world as a whole, women die at the rate of one very minute, mostly from preventable causes.

There are five technical reasons they die. In fact, those are the same reasons here in New York as they are in Nairobi… but they also die because they don’t have access to schools, clinic services, or contraceptives. The list goes on…

The fact is, it’s doable. Twenty years ago the WHO [World Health Organization] said, “We’re beginning to see data that suggests that maternal mortality is a big issue. Does anyone know about this?”...I happened to be sitting there and thought, “My God, of course we have to do something about this!” and it came at the time when I was working at the Carnegie Foundation… I’d been very active in family planning because when we [she and her husband] lived in Africa, I worked at the family planning outpatient clinic… and Kenya was one of the few countries that had a family planning policy… I thought women need these choices. They need to decide how many and they need to decide when…

And so in February 1987, Ann Starrs [Executive Vice President at FCI] and I organized an international meeting that asked the question of  health ministers, finance ministers, researchers, and donors, “Is it happening or not?” The answer was yes, it’s happening…

There was a wonderful man there by the name of Mahmoud Fathalla from Egypt who did a spectacular conceptual presentation on “Why Did Mrs. X Die?”... Mrs. X was a stick figure on an overhead projector… Mrs. X is at the top of the road. There were turnoffs on the road (like, to school), but she couldn’t go on that road. She went further. There was no family planning and so that road was closed off. She went a little further and she was pregnant and she couldn’t get health services because that road was closed off, so Mrs. X died… There are medical reasons, but the social and cultural reasons are probably more compelling… the medical reasons are the endpoint. She bled to death or she had obstructive labor…

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