Water: A Missing Link That Can Save Mothers and Newborns

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Chamberlain, J. and E. Nakabembe. (2016). Water: A Missing Link That Can Save Mothers and Newborns. Solutions 7(6): 40-46. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/water-a-missing-link-that-can-save-mothers-and-newborns/

Perspectives Water: A Missing Link That Can Save Mothers and Newborns by Jean Chamberlain and Eve Nakabembe

F

rom the rising to the setting of the sun in a Ugandan village, the rural Ugandan mother’s life is impacted by water. She wakes up thinking about fetching water from the nearest borehole, and goes to bed at night hoping she has the jerry cans filled with enough of this precious substance. Walking on average 48 minutes to fetch and return with water,1 a young girl named Prossy walks toward a water borehole. She fills her jerry cans and races back home. She needs to get to school by 7:30a.m.—it is now 6:45, and the sun is just rising. Her bright future rests significantly on her ability to complete her education—to finish at least primary school, and hopefully secondary. Poorly-educated mothers have higher rates of maternal death, and are less likely to plan for their families both in terms of total number of children, and the spacing of their births.2 Both of these factors (high fertility and short spacing between births) are significant risk factors for maternal and newborn death.3 This morning, Prossy is fortunate to have escaped any predators—both man and beast—that lie in wait for young girls who are searching for the life-sustaining commodity. Her older sister Lydia was not so fortunate last year, and now she has a baby in her arms. The accused of the crime takes no responsibility, and Lydia has joined the ranks of the school dropouts. She has no chance of finishing her education, unless her school director breaks the unwritten rule of prohibiting young mothers from rejoining school after giving birth. There are no social supports or special programs to reintegrate these young mothers back into educational fora. Instead, they are often denied entrance into any school.

Mark Kibirige

Even pregnant mothers still have to fetch water daily, including this expecting woman in Lugazi, Uganda. Many walk several kilometres each way, and carry as much as 20 litres of water.

40  |  Solutions  |  November-December 2016  |  www.thesolutionsjournal.org


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