Jhpiego wins $75 million award to save lives of women and families worldwide
05 August 2004
Baltimore, Md. – Jhpiego, an international health organization
at The Johns Hopkins University, has received a five-year award of $75 million from the U.S.
Agency for International Development to lead ACCESS,
a program to save the lives of mothers and newborns in developing nations.
Jhpiego is a 31-year-old organization dedicated to improving health care for women
and families. It builds capacity in developing countries by training and supporting local healthcare
providers, including doctors, nurses, midwives, and health educators, in areas where few if any
providers currently practice.
Jhpiego works throughout Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and Europe.
Its partners in the ACCESS program include Save the Children, Constella Futures,
the Academy for Educational Development, the American College of Nurse-Midwives
and IMA World Health.
"Jhpiego and our partners are proud to lead this country's flagship program to
provide improved care for women and children in developing countries," said Leslie D. Mancuso,
CEO of Jhpiego. "We will develop the health infrastructure that gives critical support to women
and families. We will foster the adoption of proven practices that are the best hope for a
healthy future. Through ACCESS, we can make sure that women give birth in clean and safe surroundings,
with a trained birth provider and the support of their community, so that mothers and newborns,
especially in the critical first days of life, survive and thrive."
ACCESS, providing "Access
to Clinical and Community Maternal, Neonatal and Women's Health Services," is a follow-on program
to Jhpiego's Maternal and Neonatal Health (MNH) Program, which also was funded by USAID.
Through ACCESS, Jhpiego and its partners will build on the MNH Program's successes
in increasing survival rates of mothers and newborns in 18 countries, from Guatemala to Indonesia,
from Zambia to Nepal, since the MNH Program's inception in 1998. Through the MNH Program,
Jhpiego and its partners have developed global guidelines, best practices and evidence-based
treatments and made them work in countries. They have educated in-country experts who can practice,
teach, and advocate for communities, patients and families. They have mobilized communities
to demand more and better quality health care. They have introduced infection prevention techniques
and a rigorous quality improvement process instituted at local hospitals and clinics.
ACCESS supports the global momentum and commitment for maternal, newborn and
women's health, and represents wider implementation of the best practices and programs piloted
through MNH: interventions for birth preparation and safe delivery, integrating care for mothers
and newborns, and identifying and training skilled birth attendants. To ensure improved outcomes
for mothers and their newborns, ACCESS will scale up proven best practices in essential maternal
and newborn care such as the prevention of malaria in pregnancy and the reduction of bleeding in
childbirth or postpartum hemorrhage-the leading cause of maternal death worldwide. The new
program's approach to integrating maternal and newborn care is not only the best way to ensure
that mother and baby both receive essential health and nutrition services, it is also the most
economical way to deliver services.
In addition, the program will build on community mobilization efforts that have
been proven to increase chances for maternal survival in rural communities throughout the
developing world. The ACCESS Partnership will engage policymakers, providers, and other
key stakeholders to ensure that integrated, high-quality services reach women, families,
and communities, particularly marginalized and vulnerable populations.
Through existing partnerships, ACCESS will continue to disseminate state-of-the-art
practices for maternal, newborn, and women's health and further define and scale up new strategies
for linking women and newborns with basic life-saving services.
"Each year, more than 500,000 women die in childbirth," Mancuso said. "Through
our work in MNH we were able to change the paradigm from maternal deaths to saving women's
and newborns lives -through training and providing more skilled birth attendants at childbirth,
through infection prevention techniques, through active treatment to avoid bleeding in childbirth.
"We know how to ensure survival. Every family in the world has the right to demand
access to quality care that makes the difference between life and death. Through ACCESS, we
can begin to turn that promise into a reality. Women and children deserve nothing less."
About Jhpiego
For 35 years, Jhpiego, (pronounced "ja-pie-go"), has empowered front-line health
workers by designing and implementing simple, low-cost, hands-on solutions that
strengthen the delivery of health care services, following the
household-to-hospital continuum of care. We partner with community- to
national-level organizations to build sustainable, local capacity through
advocacy, policy and guidelines development, and quality and performance
improvement approaches.
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