What do you do to support the mother after birth? If she can't afford to have the baby, can she afford to care for it for the next 10+ years? Do you think your service is creating an "another mouth to feed" problem?
The main problem is not that they cannot afford to have the baby but that they are not delivering it safely at the health clinics. Instead, they are delivering it with traditional birth attendants. This is especially a problem because it can increase the chances of the baby being born diseases like HIV, which has a 50% chance of leading to death within the first two years. The cost of a baby being born with HIV runs into many thousands of dollars.
Also, infant mortality has a strong correlation with the fertility rate, so trying to increase the probability of survival of babies can help reduce the number of babies being born (which addresses the problem you mentioned).
Honest question, how does birthing the traditional way increase the chance of HIV infection? Also, are you doing anything to bring the positive aspects of the traditional into the clinic?
And your post is kind of grayed out, does that mean it's been downvoted? (I only see up vote option, do I need more points to downvote?)
Good question. Clinics are more hygienic (reducing the chance of blood transmission during birth), provide ARVs pre-birth (reduces HIV viral count), and give Nevirapine at birth (giving this to newborns immediately after birth is the biggest individual step that can reduce transmission).
Not sure why the post is grayed out or what it means. I believe only some members have downvoting privileges (I don't).
This is the cost to the government and NGOs. Basically, this leads to a lifetime of consuming drugs which often need to be subsidized by the government and other orgs. Naturally, it also increases the probability of more people getting infected. The costs are hard to estimate but add up to a very large sum and consumes a lot of global aid money that could be better used if these babies weren't born with HIV.
Thanks for pointing that out. While the average estimated number is easily into the thousands of $$, there is not enough evidence to say that it is hundreds of thousands.
In the article I see no mention of obstetric fistula [0]. This is a serious problem that leads to shame, pain, and serious economic loss for mothers who suffer it. Am I correct to assume your program seeks to prevent fistulas from occurring? Does your program also include include care for women with fistulas?
We haven't had this problem yet and no clinic has reported this as a potential issue either. From what we have seen, these mothers care about their babies A LOT!