Thursday, August 15, 2013
German Development Cooperation provides supplies to improve maternal and newborn health in Cambodia
Kampong Thom, Cambodia Mothers and their newborns in three
provinces (Kampong Thom, Kampot and Kep) will benefit from equipment and
supplies to improve their health, funded by the German Government as a result
of a partnership agreement between the German international cooperation agency,
GIZ, and the UN children’s agency, UNICEF.
With the German grant, UNICEF procured equipment valued at
more than $ 500,000 including ultrasound scanners, foetal heart detectors,
sterilizing apparatus, surgical delivery instruments and resuscitators, to
enhance the delivery of quality essential and emergency obstetric and newborn
care services to some 300,000 women of reproductive age attending government
health centres and hospitals in the three provinces. The supplies also include
newborn kits with baby care items to be given to mothers attending government
health facilities, with a view to encouraging community demand and utilisation
of health services.
While Cambodia has made good progress with reducing maternal
and child mortality, three out of four newborn deaths occur in their first week
of life, especially during the first day, largely due to complications at birth
and lack of postpartum care.
At the handover ceremony for the medical equipment and
supplies, the Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Germany, H.E. Dr. Wolfgang
Moser, congratulated the Royal Government of Cambodia for the progress so far
achieved: “This success persuades the Federal Government of Germany to continue
its support to the Ministry of Health in view of responding to the needs of the
Cambodian population.”
In her remarks, UNICEF Representative in Cambodia, Rana
Flowers said, “UNICEF is pleased to partner with GIZ, to contribute our
experience and expertise in procurement, to provide critical, quality,
value-for-money supplies from reliable manufacturers, to support the government
to deliver and scale-up essential services for mothers and newborns.”
Receiving the equipment, the Secretary of State for Health,
Ministry of Health, His Excellency Professor Eng Huot, said, “Limited resources
– human and financial – continue to be a major constraint to scale-up essential
and life-saving health interventions to reduce maternal mortality. We are
therefore, most grateful that the German Government and UNICEF have responded
together to work with us to address this issue.
The German Federal Ministry for Economic and Development
(BMZ) is funding development cooperation programmes in 50 developing countries
worldwide. The cooperation with the Royal Government of Cambodia was resumed in
1994 and is mainly implemented by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale
Zusammenarbeit, GIZ, and KfW Entwicklungsbank. Health and Rural Development are
the two priority areas of German Development Cooperation in Cambodia,
facilitated by a cross-cutting area Good Governance. Technical and financial
assistance in the health sector is provided through the “Social Health
Protection Programme”, with a focus on health care financing, health service
delivery, and health system governance. The Rights-based Family Planning and
Maternal Health (Muskoka) project is part of this programme.
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