The mother of four children, a pregnant Anita Devi arrived at the
primary health center near her village for one of her antenatal visits.
Nurse-midwife Rati Rani made the 35-year-old mother comfortable and, as
part of the visit, talked with Mrs. Devi about her family and the risks
of having children too close together. This child would be Mrs. Devi’s
fifth in nine years of marriage; three of her children were born within a
year of each other.
After
the birth of her fifth child, Anita Devi (left) chose intrauterine
contraception with the help and encouragement of nurse-midwife Rati
Rani. Rani is among hundreds of nurse-midwives at the forefront of
India’s postpartum family planning effort.
“My mother-in-law
was against any form of contraception,” Mrs. Devi explained when asked
about her previous births. “Though my second child was a son, she said
that I should try for more sons. But my next children were girls. I was
tired and felt I had nothing left in my body.”
Rani had heard such
explanations before. In Bihar province, families have on average 3.7
children, and only 32.4 percent of women use any family planning method.
Rani
and hundreds of other nurse-midwives across India are at the forefront
of a targeted effort by the government of India to save lives by
reinvigorating postpartum family planning (PPFP) services. With the
support and technical expertise of Jhpiego and partners, India’s
nurse-midwives are educating and counseling women about their family
planning options during antenatal visits and introducing them to the
intrauterine contraceptive device (IUCD). This long-acting method lasts
for 10 years and can be inserted within 48 hours after giving birth. As
part of its lifesaving work in India, Jhpiego is helping to reinvigorate
vital family planning services in 16 states and assist the Indian
Nursing Council in strengthening the education of nursing and midwifery
students.
Mrs. Devi and her husband chose to have an IUCD inserted
after she gave birth to her fifth child, a girl. “Every time I feel
doubtful, I come to Rani,” she said. “She explains it all beautifully to
me and now I am confident that I have done the right thing.”
Rani,
35, says the government initiative is having an impact in the 42
villages served by the Teghra Primary Health Center. Since January of
this year, 241 women have been provided postpartum IUCD services, 186 of
them by Rani.
She has seen firsthand the challenges women and
their families face when burdened with too many children, often
struggling to provide them with food and clothing. “The mother suffers
in silence,” says Rani, who was trained by Jhpiego under the PPFP
initiative supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
“Only if we have smaller families will we be able to have healthier
families where the children will get better nutrition and opportunities
to educate themselves. Only then can we ultimately have a better and
healthier society.”
Source: http://www.impatientoptimists.org/Posts/2013/04/Family-Planning-After-Childbirth-Is-Critical-to-Womens-Health
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