Washington,
D.C. — U.S. Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Chris Coons
(D-DE) introduced the Reach Every Mother and Child Act to strengthen U.S.
government efforts to end preventable deaths of mothers, newborns, and young
children in developing nations around the world.
Every day, approximately 800 women, almost entirely
from developing countries, die from
preventable causes related to pregnancy
and childbirth, and the risk of a woman dying in childbirth is 47 times
higher in Africa than in the United States. In addition, more than 16,000
children under five years old will die each day of treatable conditions.“Although progress has been made in improving the health of mothers and children, it is a tragedy that so many preventable deaths still occur,” said Senator Collins. “By supporting simple, proven, and cost-effective interventions, our bipartisan legislation will improve the health and well-being of mothers and children in developing countries and bring us closer to achieving the goal of ending preventable maternal and child deaths worldwide.”
“For too many women and families, pregnancy and
childbirth are risky, life-threatening conditions that are filled with stress
rather than joy and expectation,” said Senator Coons.
“The Reach Act directs USAID to deliver a comprehensive strategy that
prioritizes cost-effective, proven interventions to prevent these tragic
deaths. This bipartisan bill will bring relief to mothers who can safely
carry, deliver, and raise their newborns knowing that the care they need is
now available."
The United States has been a global leader in reaching mothers and children in developing countries with life-saving interventions, including skill birth attendants, basic resuscitation options for newborns, vaccinations, and other cost-effective, evidence-based interventions.
The Reach Act has been endorsed by CARE International,
PATH, RESULTS, Save the Children Action Network, and World Vision. The bill
would provide the focus and tools necessary to accelerate progress toward
ending preventable maternal and child deaths by:
Establishing the goal of ending preventable maternal,
newborn, and child deaths by 2030;
Requiring the Administration to implement a strategy to
achieve this goal by scaling up the most-effective evidence-based
interventions;
Permitting USAID greater flexibility to use
“pay-for-success” financing models where foreign aid is only expended for
results rather than inputs, and
establishing a permanent Maternal and Child Survival
Coordinator at USAID who would be focused on implementing the strategy and
verify that the most effective interventions are scaled up in target
countries.
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