With close to 500 days remaining until the Millennium Development Goals’ (MDGs’) deadline, the world has a pivotal moment to accelerate action and scale-up investment towards achieving MDGs 4 and 5(A&B). Acting now on what we know works, where we know to invest and how much, we can accelerate our achievements in 2015
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In Liberia, contact tracing key to curtailing Ebola’s spread

11 November 2014
A delivery of UNFPA supplies arrives at the JFK Memorial Hospital maternity center in Monrovia, part of UNFPA's response to the Ebola outbreak in Liberia. Photo credit: UNFPA WCARO
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News

West Darfur woman defies opposition to antenatal care, safely delivers triplets

05 November 2014
Khadija Abdulla with her triplets. Photo credit: UNFPA/Abdehafiz
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News

Pregnant women forced to flee escalating crisis in Iraq

11 September 2014
Khawla and her family rest in a tent in the Khanke displacement camp in Dohuk, Iraq. <i>Photo credit: UNFPA/Millat Hirori
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In the developing world, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, progress in reducing maternal and newborn deaths has been slow. One reason for the persistently high maternal and newborn mortality rates is the lack of access to family planning for those women who want to delay or prevent pregnancy. Family planning through eliminating unintended pregnancies reduces maternal and newborn mortality rates and improves the health and well-being of women and their existing children.

Some 15 per cent of pregnant women worldwide face potential life-threatening complications during pregnancy, delivery or afterwards. Despite this, 35 percent of new mothers in developing countries will give birth either alone or without skilled care during what is one of the most dangerous passages a woman will undergo in her entire lifetime.For a country to prevent women and newborn babies from dying during childbirth, one of the most important investments it can make is in human resources to ensure skilled birth attendance during pregnancy and delivery.

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