Globally, there are high rates of death among pregnant women and new-born babies due to poor quality of care. Reviewing deaths of mothers and babies helps health workers, governments and community members to identify and solve issues in access and quality of care. This process, known as Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response (MPDSR), can reduce deaths by a third. In many countries, MPDSR has not had the expected impact due to:

  • weak health systems with poor leadership
  • exclusion of communities from the process
  • insufficient resources
  • lack of training

Fear of blame and punishment discourages people from reporting deaths or providing complete information, so discussions do not address the main issues, and the necessary actions are not taken. Lack of change demotivates health workers and communities. More evidence is needed on how to build a cost-efficient, acceptable MPDSR process, adapted and integrated within local country health systems.

This project is led by the University of Southampton,
in proud collaboration with universities across Africa and beyond.

Haramya university - Building the basis for development