• Stud Fam Plann · Dec 1998

    Review

    Dead mothers and injured wives: the social context of maternal morbidity and mortality among the Hausa of northern Nigeria.

    • L L Wall.
    • Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans 70112, USA.
    • Stud Fam Plann. 1998 Dec 1;29(4):341-59.

    AbstractNorthern Nigeria has a maternal mortality ratio greater than 1,000 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Serious maternal morbidity (for example, vesico-vaginal fistula) is also common. Among the most important factors contributing to this tragic situation are: an Islamic culture that undervalues women; a perceived social need for women's reproductive capacities to be under strict male control; the practice of purdah (wife seclusion), which restricts women's access to medical care; almost universal female illiteracy; marriage at an early age and pregnancy often occurring before maternal pelvic growth is complete; a high rate of obstructed labor; directly harmful traditional medical beliefs and practices; inadequate facilities to deal with obstetric emergencies; a deteriorating economy; and a political culture marked by rampant corruption and inefficiency. The convergence of all of these factors has resulted in one of the worst records of female reproductive health existing anywhere in the world.

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