Women Trying to Regain Dignity by Ending Fistula
For many women with obstetric fistula, marital and social status—and quality of life—hang on the fate of an operation.
For many women with obstetric fistula, marital and social status—and quality of life—hang on the fate of an operation.
The 68th World Health Assembly made it clear that Ebola has fundamentally changed the direction of global health discourse.
We don’t hear much about fistula here in North Carolina. But many women across sub-Saharan Africa and Asia know it all too well.
This mobile technology is connecting people and making health systems stronger amid West Africa's ongoing Ebola outbreak—and its story is just beginning.
Women in rural areas face particularly high maternal health risks. The right skills and support can help nurses change that.
Midwives and nurses bring compassion to L’Hôpital Sainte-Thérèse.
Think of the global progress we could make if we, as organizations, talked less and listened more. This came up again and again at SwitchPoint.
Midwives could deliver 87% of the world’s sexual, reproductive, maternal, and newborn health services. But a global shortage is holding us back.
Midwifery students can learn great clinical skills. Attitude is harder.
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