-Knowledge has long been cited as the tool most needed to lower maternal mortality rates, but Global Water, a volunteer organization based in Oxnard, Calif., says what women in developing countries also need to combat this problem is water.
"Not having the proper amount of water on a daily basis puts stress on the body, which affects a woman's life span," said Ted Kuepper, the organization's executive director, in a telephone interview. "It also affects their ability to further their education and break out of poverty."
To help disrupt this cycle, the New York-based international reproductive health organization EngenderHealth is launching a fellowship program with Ashoka, an organization of social entrepreneurs with headquarters in Arlington, Va., to focus on improving maternal health in the world's poorest nations. The initiative will concentrate on parts of the world with the highest maternal and child mortality rates, says Tim Thomas, senior advisor of the Maternal Health Task Force at EngenderHealth.
"The rates are highest in Africa and South Asia," he said in a telephone interview, but added that "we're not committing to any particular countries at this point."
http://www.womensenews.org/story/environmental-health/091104/water-key-reducing-maternal-mortality