Skip to main content
  • Sections
  • Search

Center for Strategic & International Studies

User menu

  • Subscribe
  • Sign In

   Ranked #1 Think Tank in U.S. by Global Go To Think Tank Index

Topics

  • Climate Change
  • Cybersecurity and Technology
    • Cybersecurity
    • Data Governance
    • Intelligence, Surveillance, and Privacy
    • Military Technology
    • Space
    • Technology and Innovation
  • Defense and Security
    • Counterterrorism and Homeland Security
    • Defense Budget
    • Defense Industry, Acquisition, and Innovation
    • Defense Strategy and Capabilities
    • Geopolitics and International Security
    • Long-Term Futures
    • Missile Defense
    • Space
    • Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation
  • Economics
    • Asian Economics
    • Global Economic Governance
    • Trade and International Business
  • Energy and Sustainability
    • Energy, Climate Change, and Environmental Impacts
    • Energy and Geopolitics
    • Energy Innovation
    • Energy Markets, Trends, and Outlooks
  • Global Health
    • Family Planning, Maternal and Child Health, and Immunizations
    • Multilateral Institutions
    • Health and Security
    • Infectious Disease
  • Human Rights
    • Civil Society
    • Transitional Justice
    • Human Security
  • International Development
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Governance and Rule of Law
    • Humanitarian Assistance
    • Private Sector Development
    • U.S. Development Policy

Regions

  • Africa
    • North Africa
    • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Americas
    • Caribbean
    • North America
    • South America
  • Arctic
  • Asia
    • Afghanistan
    • Australia, New Zealand & Pacific
    • China
    • India
    • Japan
    • Korea
    • Pakistan
    • Southeast Asia
  • Europe
    • European Union
    • NATO
    • Post-Soviet Europe
    • Turkey
  • Middle East
    • The Gulf
    • Egypt and the Levant
    • North Africa
  • Russia and Eurasia
    • The South Caucasus
    • Central Asia
    • Post-Soviet Europe
    • Russia

Sections menu

  • Programs
  • Experts
  • Events
  • Analysis
    • Blogs
    • Books
    • Commentary
    • Congressional Testimony
    • Critical Questions
    • Interactive Reports
    • Journals
    • Newsletter
    • Reports
    • Transcript
  • Podcasts
  • iDeas Lab
  • Transcripts
  • Web Projects

Main menu

  • About Us
  • Support CSIS
    • Securing Our Future
Blog Post - Smart Global Health
Share
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Printfriendly.com

Saving Mothers, Giving Life: Attainable or Simply Aspirational?

June 20, 2012

Janet Fleischman
Senior Associate, Global Health Policy Center

On June 1 in Oslo, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced the “Saving Mothers, Giving Life” project—an ambitious, dynamic effort by the U.S. government with a new public private partnership to drive efficiencies, spur innovation, and ensure impact in this fundamental area of global health.  Maternal mortality is the ultimate health indicator, reflecting both a health system’s strength and how accessible it is to women and girls of reproductive age.  If successful, “Saving Mothers” will be an important dimension of Clinton’s legacy as Secretary, lifting the lives of women, families, and communities around the world.

The “Saving Mothers” project is the first concrete expression of how the Obama Administration’s Global Health Initiative (GHI) can change the way the U.S. government operates in the global health arena.

It is a concentrated pilot in targeted geographic areas of Zambia and Uganda that focuses on a limited time window—the first 24 hours around labor, delivery, and the immediate postpartum period—because two-thirds of maternal deaths and 45 percent of neonatal deaths occur in that crucial span of time.  The aim of “Saving Mothers” is to reduce maternal deaths by 50% in 12 months – by June 2013.

Yet the program’s success is far from assured. The question that inevitably arises is whether these big ideas and much-needed goals for reducing maternal mortality can be translated into building the long-term support necessary to address maternal and child health – the core of health systems in developing countries – while reformulating long-standing and sometimes difficult relationships between multiple U.S. agencies that each have a piece of the U.S. global health agenda, all at a time of shrinking U.S. foreign assistance budgets?

Until now, GHI has been more of an approach than a program, which has made it difficult to quantify on the ground. It seeks to solve global health problems by building on and linking with existing health programs and focusing on seven core principles.

“Saving Mothers” is designed to build on programs already put in place by the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as well as Peace Corps and Department of Defense. GHI officials say “GHI is a way of doing business—it’s not a pot of money.”

GHI is exploring new public-private partnerships to help bring in sustainable financing for “Saving Mothers.” This includes support from the Norwegian government, Merck for Mothers, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and Every Mother Counts. Secretary Clinton announced that the U.S. is committing $75 million to this initiative, although the majority of this is not new funding, but rather shifted from other accounts.

When evaluating the concept underlying “Saving Mothers,” some observers are skeptical—even cynical.  One implementing partner called it “an unrealistic set of expectations, magical thinking.”

GHI officials acknowledge the challenges, but see “Saving Mothers” as a risk worth taking.  As one official explained: “Is it feasible? Is it the right thing to do? …There is an element of risk, but we can do nothing or we can do something….This is a bellwether issue—if we can’t save mothers at birth, how can we move up the chain of progress?  We have to break the cycle.”

And, despite the implicit urgency of “Saving Mothers’” one-year timeline, its greatest impact may be as a catalyst rather than a milestone. 

In Oslo, Secretary Clinton acknowledged that the world risks failing in its collective promise to cut maternal mortality by three-quarters by 2015, and outlined how new partnerships can help meet those commitments.  That’s a tall order, especially in these tough economic times, but that’s the challenge and the opportunity in tackling maternal mortality.

Click here to download the brief.  As always, i welcome your questions and comments. Please leave your thoughts below.

A longer version of this blog was originally published in the Global Post.

Related Content

  • The Global Health Initiative in Malawi
  • The Global Health Initiative: New Guidance Issued Women, Girls, and Gender Equality
  • Reflections on Advancing Health in Ethiopia
Media Queries

Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
Chief Communications Officer
Tel: 202.775.3242

Contact Caleb Diamond
Media Relations Manager and Editorial Associate
Tel: 202.775.3173

More from this blog

Blog Post
U.S.-Japan Dialogue: Strengthening the Partnership on Global Health
By J. Stephen Morrison
In Smart Global Health
July 25, 2017
Blog Post
Yellow Fever in Brazil: The Latest Global Health Security Threat
In Smart Global Health
June 23, 2017
Blog Post
Brazil's Sistema Único da Saúde (SUS): Caught in the Cross Fire
By Katherine E. Bliss
In Smart Global Health
June 21, 2017
Blog Post
GPEI’s Funding Decline Among Tedros’ Top Challenges as WHO Director-General
By Nellie Bristol
In Smart Global Health
June 9, 2017
Blog Post
Achieving TB Milestones Through Last Mile Delivery in India
In Smart Global Health
May 25, 2017
Blog Post
Training the Informal Health Workforce in India
In Smart Global Health
May 22, 2017
Blog Post
What’s to Be Done to End the Opioid Epidemic?
In Smart Global Health
May 19, 2017
Blog Post
New Partnerships Needed after Ebola's Hard Lessons
By J. Stephen Morrison
In Smart Global Health
April 25, 2017

Related Content

Commentary
A New Covid-19 Mantra? 'Nobody Is Safe until Everybody Is Fed'
By Chase Sova
December 4, 2020
Report
Sustaining U.S. Support for Gavi: A Critical Global Health Security and Development Partner
By Katherine E. Bliss
February 24, 2020
Report
Elevating Women Peacebuilders amidst Covid-19
By Erol Yayboke
August 10, 2020
Commentary
Why Africa Matters to Birmingham
By Judd Devermont
October 28, 2020
Commentary
U.S.-India Economic Ties: Opportunity through Crisis
By Richard M. Rossow
May 13, 2020
Report
Enhancing U.S. Leadership in a New Era of Global Immunization
By Nellie Bristol, Michaela Simoneau, Katherine E. Bliss
September 27, 2019
Report
Unraveling the Water Crisis in Venezuela
By Moises Rendon, Mark L. Schneider, Arianna Kohan
December 10, 2019
Commentary
From Crisis to Inclusion: The Story of Venezuela’s Women
By Arianna Kohan, Moises Rendon
March 4, 2020
Footer menu
  • Topics
  • Regions
  • Programs
  • Experts
  • Events
  • Analysis
  • Web Projects
  • Podcasts
  • iDeas Lab
  • Transcripts
  • About Us
  • Support Us
Contact CSIS
Email CSIS
Tel: 202.887.0200
Fax: 202.775.3199
Visit CSIS Headquarters
1616 Rhode Island Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Media Queries

Contact H. Andrew Schwartz
Chief Communications Officer
Tel: 202.775.3242

Contact Caleb Diamond
Media Relations Manager and Editorial Associate
Tel: 202.775.3173

Daily Updates

Sign up to receive The Evening, a daily brief on the news, events, and people shaping the world of international affairs.

Subscribe to CSIS Newsletters

Follow CSIS
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

All content © 2020. All rights reserved.

Legal menu
  • Credits
  • Privacy Policy
  • Reprint Permissions