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Holiday Giving: Cuso International’s Maternal Health Program

By  Heather Greenwood (sponsored guest post)

In Ethiopia, more than 80 per cent of women give birth without a skilled health worker. If complications arise, the consequences can be tragic.

This blog post first appeared on Heather’s site, Globetrotting Mama.

Guess which country is turning up as one of 2018’s hottest new travel destinations: Ethiopia.

Yup, that Ethiopia.

The African country, where for so many years famine was the only thing we heard about when its name was mentioned, is now poised as a tourism destination to watch in 2018. In fact, National Geographic Traveler just listed it as a top place to visit in 2018.

It makes sense. From UNESCO World Heritage Sites to local cooking classes, there are great reasons to go. And now that Ethiopian airlines’ is offering non-stop flights from Toronto to Addis Ababa, it’s even easier to get there.

All signs point to it as the next tourism hot spot.

So why mention Ethiopia as a holiday giving option?

Because although the country is poised to do incredibly well, it isn’t quite out of the woods yet and through Cuso International, we can help make a difference. And one of the areas where that is most obvious is maternal health.

Midwifery in Ethiopia

More than 80 percent of women give birth without a skilled health worker in Ethiopia. That means the clear majority of mothers there have no help if they face complications before, during or after giving birth. The consequences can be tragic for both mother and baby; the country – despite significant improvement in health care over the years – still has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in Africa.

But that too can change.

For more than 55 years, Cuso International has sent Canadians to volunteer on life-changing projects around the world. One of the things that really separates Cuso International from most other charities in the development work space is that they work with local people, and focus on sending volunteers for specific projects. The result is a human-to-human opportunity that impacts both sides of the equation and makes a measurable difference.

While you may have last encountered Cuso International in the halls of your university or college, the fact is that volunteers range in age and ability. And through this maternal health program in Ethiopia, the organization is bringing skilled Canadian volunteers to the country. The result: Improved medical care and more informed health decisions.

What I like about the Cuso International approach, is that the goal isn’t to land in a country and take over. Quite the opposite. Cuso International volunteers approach each country with the goal of sharing their knowledge with doctors, nurses, staff and patients and empowering the locals to help themselves.

Your help is making a difference

Jennica RawstronThat white-jacketed lady in the photo is Jennica Rawstron, a Canadian mid-wife from Vancouver who has volunteered with the Cuso International Maternal Health program. In Ethiopia, she helped train her hospital counterparts. While the local midwives did most of the actual “baby catching,” Jennica attended at several deliveries to learn, assist and share practice information. In one of those first deliveries, the baby was turned upside down in the womb resulting in a breech birth. The baby died.

“It really had an impact on me because I’ve never had a stillbirth in Canada,” Rawstron says. “Breech deliveries are not common in Canada because most women in that situation would have a scheduled C-section.”

She’s right. My second child, Cameron was a breech baby and as a result was delivered by C-section. It was a routine delivery and he’s now a healthy, thriving teen. In Ethiopia that same set of circumstances would’ve led to a gamble. With only one nurse or midwife for well over 4,000 people in the country, compared to 1 for every 102 people here in Canada, it’s a very real concern.

It’s not hard to imagine the fear that must grip parents when they hear the news. For a mother or child to lose their life over a completely preventable birthing situation is heart wrenching to think about.

Holiday Giving: How to help

Helping to improve lives in Ethiopia is easy. There are so many ways we can help, and the holidays offer the perfect opportunity to start.

Pledge a monthly gift – If you’re ready to keep that spirit of giving going beyond the holiday season, consider a monthly gift. Every dollar pledged to Cuso International has an impact that is ten times its value! Giving whatever you can means you are providing even more women and children with life-saving health care.

Pledge a one-time gift - Your contribution will go toward supporting Cuso International’s highest priority projects around the world, including this Maternal Health program that will improve health care for vulnerable moms and babies in Ethiopia.

Heather Greenwood 150This post was sponsored in part by Cuso International. As always, the opinions are my own.

Heather Greenwood Davis is a Contributing Editor for National Geographic Traveler magazine, sits on the advisory board for the Family Travel Association, and is a columnist for Lexpert Magazine. For over 20 years she has written articles for The Toronto Star. She also contributes to a host of media outlets in print, on television, on radio and online. When not chasing children out of her office or convincing her family that cold weather destinations should be outlawed, she enjoys movie marathons and musicals she can sing along to. 

 

 

Verge Magazine sponsored content disclosure: This is a paid guest post. The content is created by an advertiser and represents the views and opinions of the advertiser, who is responsible for all of the material contained in the ad. Links are not endorsements by Verge Magazine.

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