A severe lack of emergency healthcare
"In CAR, to be born or to give birth is to take a risk," says Professor Norbert Richard Ngbale, an obstetrician-gynaecologist in the CHUC’s maternity and neonatology department.
"There are only about 15 gynaecologists in the country, for a population of six million. There is a massive lack of qualified staff, especially in rural areas, where you mostly have traditional birth attendants who are not trained to detect complications,” he says.
Most maternal deaths in CAR are related to unsafe abortions and women who give birth at home, but also to pregnancies that occur too early (when the girl or woman is too physically immature to give birth safely).
Many of these could be avoided if healthcare was available, either in terms of pregnancy support or family planning provision. CAR’s chronic medical emergency is also fuelled by extreme poverty: although maternal and child healthcare is officially free in CAR, too often it is only available to those who can pay.
“In a country where 70 per cent of people live on less than US$2 a day, every decision must be weighed up financially, even if it means putting one's health at risk,” says René Colgo, MSF head of mission in CAR.
“For patients, going to hospital is an expense. They don't have money to pay for antenatal care, nor for transport to hospital, let alone for the delivery. Many women think it is better to go to hospital at the last minute, if at all. Supporting the provision of free care is therefore vital.”