Newborns at Risk as Monsoon Season Approaches
Newborns at Risk as Monsoon Season Approaches Says Save the Children.
Thousands of newborn babies are at serious risk of illness or death in Nepal, Save the Children warns, one month on from the earthquake that claimed more than 9,000 lives.
An estimated 92,900 pregnant women were among the population hit by the powerful earthquakes that struck April 25th and May 12th. Many of them are now living outside their damaged homes with their babies, under plastic sheeting in cold and increasingly unsanitary conditions. When the monsoon season starts in a few weeks, heavy rains will increase the risk of disease spreading, particularly waterborne diseases like cholera.
In the earthquake-affected areas, such as Sindhupalchok, Dolakha and Gorkha, 73% of health facilities providing maternity care have been damaged or destroyed, leaving women with few options to access neonatal and postnatal healthcare.
Dr. Louisa Baxter, Health Coordinator for Save the Children’s emergency response in Nepal, said: “The critical first few days of a baby’s life are when they are at their most vulnerable. Simple things like not having a sterile implement to cut the umbilical cord, or not having a clean and dry place to sleep, can be deadly for a newborn.
“One month on from the earthquake in Nepal, making sure that mothers have a safe place to give birth and bring their babies back to must be a priority.”
Rupa, the mother of a three month old baby, had her home in Dolakha province destroyed in the second earthquake. “The drinking water here is coming out yellow now since the earthquake, and the ground floods where we’re sleeping at night,” she said.
“I’m really worried about the small children – we adults can live out in the cold without proper food, but how will babies survive?”
Save the Children is working in the worst affected areas to support mothers and protect babies and children, reaching more than 127,531 people in the month since the earthquake hit. The charity’s work includes:
• Running mobile health clinics and setting up
semi-permanent tented clinics in seven districts that have
lost their health facilities
•
• Giving baby
kits to new mothers and Safe Delivery Kits to health
clinics
•
• Distributing essential shelter items
such as tarpaulin and blankets, as well as food, hygiene
kits and kitchen sets
•
• Repairing broken water
and sanitation facilities, building toilets in displacement
camps and giving out chlorine tablets to purify
water
•
• Setting up dozens of temporary
classrooms and child friendly spaces, to help children
recover and return to a normal
life.
•
ENDS