Thamis face maternal health issues due to early marriages

In Thamichagu village of around 400 Thami households, children are encouraged to find a partner as soon as they hit puberty.

सम्बन्धित सामग्री

New study challenges scale of maternal health crisis in US

Hundreds of women in the United States die from complications related to pregnancy, childbirth and the time after giving birth each year, and the country’s high maternal death rate makes it an outlier among developed nations.

Ministry instructs agencies to prepare the health budget within previous ceiling

In the current fiscal year, 35 percent of national health budget was slashed. This hampered several healthcare programmes including maternal health, child health, family planning, and nutrition.

Ministry instructs agencies to prepare the health budget within previous ceiling

In the current fiscal year, 35 percent of national health budget was slashed. This hampered several healthcare programmes including maternal health, child health, family planning, and nutrition.

More than 200 birthing centres across country lack trained nurses

Of the total maternal deaths, 24 percent occur during or after childbirth and 19 percent in postnatal period. Experts say Nepal risks losing the gains made in maternal health sector.

Budget cuts in maternal health carry serious risks, experts warn

Antenatal and postnatal care, institutional delivery, verbal autopsy of maternal deaths, and training will be impacted.

Over 60,000 pregnant women lack maternal health services

Floods that ravaged one-third of Pakistan have left about 600,000 pregnant women lacking maternal health services.

Maternity health programme getting effective in Kawasoti

'Maternity Health Programme' introduced three years ago in Kawasoti has become effective in controlling maternal deaths. A total of 2,640 people have been benefitted from the maternal health service being run by the Kawasoti Municipality of East Nawalparasi.

UN chief urges protecting people's reproductive health rights

UNITED NATIONS, July 12: United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Sunday called for efforts to protect people's reproductive health rights as the world marks the World Population Day, which falls on July 11 annually.    "As we mark World Population Day, let us pledge to ensure the reproductive health rights of everyone, everywhere," said the UN chief in his message for the international day.    "The COVID- 19 pandemic continues to upend our world, reaching one grim milestone after another. In addition to the millions of lives tragically lost, there has been a less visible toll: a shocking rise in domestic violence as women were forced into isolation with their abusers; empty maternity wards as women postponed motherhood; and unintended pregnancies due to curtailed access to contraceptive services," said the secretary-general.    "Our latest estimates indicate that COVID-19 will push 47 million women and girls into extreme poverty. Many girls who are out of school may never return," the top UN official continued.    "In every corner of the world, we are seeing a reversal of hard-won gains and an erosion of women's reproductive rights, choices and agency. With the onset of the pandemic, resources for sexual and reproductive health services were diverted," he said.        "These gaps in access to health rights are unacceptable. Women cannot be alone in this fight," the secretary-general added.         World Population Day is an annual event, observed on July 11 every year, which seeks to raise awareness of global population issues. The event was established by the Governing Council of the United Nations Development Programme in 1989. It was inspired by the public interest in Five Billion Day on July 11, 1987, the approximate date on which the world's population reached 5 billion people. World Population Day aims to increase people's awareness on various population issues such as the importance of family planning, gender equality, poverty, maternal health and human rights