Nasco Healthcare wants to help end maternal mortality

Banner to end maternal mortality

What is MMR?
Maternal mortality is the death of a woman due to pregnancy. This can be during pregnancy, delivery or after childbirth (postpartum). Maternal mortality rate (MMR) is the number of women who die due to pregnancy per 100,000 births. Any number above 0 is too high.

Worldwide:
About 295,000 women died due to pregnancy in 2017 alone – that is 800 women every single day. This is despite a 38% improvement in MMR from 2000 to 2017.1

North America:
In a 2020 study of 10 developed countries, the United States and Canada ranked last (MMR 17.4) and 8th (MMR 8.6), respectively. Half the deaths are during pregnancy and delivery.2

The reason? Lack of maternity care.
The US and Canada have the extremely low access to midwives and ob-gyns — 12 and 15 providers per 1,000 live births, respectively compared to Sweden which has 78.2

Nasco Healthcare has the solutions.
Nasco Healthcare has the expertise.
Nasco Healthcare helps our healthcare heroes Be READY to beat MMR.

Learn more about our maternal and neonatal solutions:
https://shop.nascohealthcare.com/collections/obstetrics-gynecology

References

  1. Trends in maternal mortality: 2000 to 2017: estimates by WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank Group and the United Nations Population Division. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2019. https://www.unfpa.org/featured-publication/trends-maternal-mortality-2000-2017
  2. Maternal Mortality and Maternity Care in the United States Compared to 10 Other Developed Countries (Commonwealth Fund, Nov. 2020). https://doi.org/10.26099/411v-9255
Facebook
LinkedIn

Recent News:

CEO Transition Communication

We would like to announce Hugo Azevedo (President, Nasco Healthcare) and Steve Cramer (Chief Financial Officer, Nasco Holdings) have each been appointed interim Co-CEOs of the Nasco Healthcare business.

Read More »

Next Generation Technology for the Next Generation

Worldwide, there are almost 1.3 billion adolescents between the ages of 10 and 19, of which 42 million are in the U.S. They represent a specific group with distinct challenges. Understanding and preparing for these specific needs will allow healthcare workers across the globe help adolescents and teens in crises. And they are needing help. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) says 16-18% of adolescents had 1 or more emergency department (ED) visits yearly. That’s at least 6.5 million ED visits every year in the U.S. alone. The numbers may vary from country to country, but the reality is the same – teens are in EDs in large numbers.

Read More »

AI in Simulation – Clinical Intelligence at NCLEX Standards

Over the past few years, the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX) has been updating its standards and is now ready with new 2023 standards for nursing. But if the changes (to language used in class and the structure of exams) are to be carried forward more widely within the nursing community, they must be incorporated within the wider training strategy.

Read More »

Book a Demo