SANA’A, Yemen – Four years into conflict, Yemen has become home to the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. Over 22 million people are in need of immediate humanitarian assistance. Two thirds of the population do not know when their next meal will come.

“Some days I cannot provide food [for my children],” said 28-year-old Umm, a mother of three. “My husband was killed in the war and left me to raise them. Every day gets worse.”

As fighting and airstrikes thrust millions to the brink of starvation, Yemen’s looming famine threatens to become the worst in recent world history.

“Now, with the blockade, we eat only one meal some days – bread and water,” 40-year-old Kefaya, a mother of six, told UNFPA. “I do not know how my kids will survive.”

Women and girls did not bring about the conflict, but they are bearing the heaviest burden.

Video of yAj7WqPVMPI

The perils of pregnancy

An estimated two million pregnant and lactating women will be at risk of death if famine strikes. Some 1.1 million are already acutely malnourished, heightening the chance of miscarriage and stillbirth.

“When I gave birth to my second child, he was deformed and died instantly,” said Amna, 30. “I had not gotten enough medication and food during my pregnancy.”

While the number of women and newborns who have died from pregnancy- and childbirth-related causes since the crisis began remains unknown, mortality rates have almost certainly spiked – and this in a country already suffering one of the highest maternal mortality ratios in the region.

Nearly half of all health facilities in Yemen are no longer operating,

cutting pregnant women off from emergency obstetric care. © UNFPA

Yemen

“I waited for my first-born child for eight years,” 24-year-old Latifa, married at age 16, told UNFPA. “My husband and I were happy when I became pregnant. But when the time came, I could not go to the hospital.”

Nearly half of all health facilities in Yemen are no longer operating, cutting pregnant women off from emergency obstetric care. Even women who live within distance to a working medical facility often cannot afford its maternal health services.

“So I decided to give birth in the house,” said Latifa. “When the time came, my mother went to get our neighbor, a midwife. They were late, and the child died inside me. He was born blue, dead.”

Her anguish was unbearable.

“I thought of committing suicide, but I refrained for my husband,” she said.

The life-saving work of midwives

Many of these losses are preventable. Worldwide, a woman dies giving birth every two minutes – and over half of these deaths occur in countries, like Yemen, affected by humanitarian crisis or fragility. Yet an estimated two thirds of all maternal and newborn deaths can be averted by well-trained midwives, according to UN data.

Maleka was pregnant when violence descended on her home in Taizz, but she – along with many women in her position – decided to steer clear of the hospital.

UNFPA is on the ground, working to support 2,500 unemployed

midwives and establish community clinics for maternal and newborn

health services. © UNFPA Yemen

“We are afraid that it might be targeted,” she told UNFPA. In August, the only major referral hospital in Hodeidah was brutally attacked.

Instead, Maleka turned to a UNFPA-supported midwife for antenatal, delivery and post-natal care. Midwives can reduce a woman’s risk of dying from severe bleeding, sepsis, eclampsia, obstructed labour and other complications.

“The midwife looks after me on a weekly basis,” Maleka said. “If I cannot go to her, she comes to my house to check on me and follow my pregnancy. She provides full care and gives us everything for free, including medical tests and medicines.”

On the ground

UNFPA has trained some 7,500 midwives in Yemen. With the support of partners, UNFPA remains on the ground, working now to support 2,500 unemployed midwives and establish community clinics for maternal and newborn health services. To date, a total of 120 community clinics have been opened in the hardest-hit areas, including 40 this year, which have served more than 2,000 women and 1,900 newborns and children.

The Fund’s work does not stop here. Since the start of 2018, UNFPA's response in Yemen has reached more than half a million people, including over 150,000 women and girls receiving protection services – such as health care, legal support, livelihood-skills development and cash assistance – and 250,000 reached with sexual and reproductive health services. UNFPA is also supporting 206 health facilities to provide care for pregnant and lactating women.

With over 3 million women and girls of reproductive age in Yemen, UNFPA and its partners will continue to help ensure their specific needs are not overlooked.

– Kelly Ashton

