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United Nations Population Fund in Uzbekistan

The informational brochure gives a comprehensive overview of UN Population Fund’s work in Uzbekistan. Along with a general description of UNFPA's goals and programmes, and its activities in Uzbekistan, it includes some basic financial data. Special highlights are the mapped examples of UNFPA's work in the country, stories of success in the variety of initiatives that we undertake, as well as guiding principles of ICPD Programme of Action.  

Y-PEER Uzbekistan News Bulletin, Issue #1 (Jan-March 2012)

First issue of the News Bulletin of Y-PEER Network in Uzbekistan, in Russian language. The Bulletin covers activities and initiatives of Y-PEER volunteers that took place during January-March 2012. It also gives highlights of some future plans, such as upcoming training activities, celebration of youth-related onservances and others.

News & Events

UNFPA Supports Midwives in Delivering Quality Maternal Healthcare Services in Uzbekistan.

20 June 2011

Nestling against his mother’s breast, barely two hours old, the infant was happy and contented. Only his mother, Ziyoda Karimova, could have been happier. “This is my third child,” she told us. “All three have been born here and the staff are great.”

Mother and child were lying in a well-lit and equipped birthing room at the Republican Centre for Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Tashkent. With its modern birthing methods and state-of-the-art equipment, the centre offers the highest quality of maternal health care currently available in Uzbekistan. With her mother-in-law and the midwife Khurshida Musaeva in attendance, the care that Ms. Karimova has received has been a world away from the techniques that were practiced during the Soviet era.

With almost thirty years’ experience at the hospital, Khurshida has witnessed the remarkable transformation.

“Before the nationwide introduction of international standards of maternal care, babies used to be separated from their mothers as soon as they were born,” she explained. “Then they would only be breast-fed on a strict regime of three hour intervals.” Khurshida hopes that pregnancy will one day be treated as a normal phase of life rather than an illness, and that the level of facilities available at her hospital will be available to all women in Uzbekistan.

This may be a distant goal, but it is one that the government, with the support of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), wants to see realized. While nearly all deliveries in Uzbekistan occur in a maternity hospital with the support of a midwife, a discrepancy remains between the services available in rural and urban regions.

Of the average 265 obstetric complications that occur in Uzbekistan each day, 170 take place in rural areas. The occurrence of maternal death also follows the same trend.

The Government hopes to change this worrisome situation through the introduction of health care reform. About a decade ago, the Ministry of Health with the support of UN agencies including the UNFPA, introduced a new delivery framework. In this framework, smaller delivery units were replaced with single well equipped child delivery complexes for each district. Regional Perinatal Hospitals offering child delivery and prenatal care services were also established.

Normal deliveries are carried out at a district and urban level, while complicated pregnancies are referred to regional level facilities.

The Deputy Minister of Health Dr. Asomiddin Kamilov has said that big improvements have been made in the last decade. “The figures speak for themselves,” he said. “In the 90’s we had a maternal mortality ratio of 65 per 100,000 live births. Now it is about 20 and we are working towards further improvements.”

In Uzbekistan, midwives play a critical role in delivering antenatal care for pregnant women and in assisting physicians during the delivery process. There are currently 24,000 midwives in the country, playing a vital role in further improving quality of care.

Problems still persist despite these advances, including gaps in the training of midwives and a problematic lack of funding. The roles and responsibilities of midwives have not been clearly defined in recent reforms.

The UNFPA has supported the Uzbekistan Government’s improvements in the field of reproductive health, and has been ready to offer further assistance by means of promoting best practices and providing international expertise.

I think the Government has made maternal health a major priority. The President has stressed that the Millennium Development Goal Number 5, on maternal health, is a big priority in this country, and we’re working very closely with the Government in realizing it.
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Mr. Karl Kulessa, UNFPA Representative in Uzbekistan

But the Government has admitted that the ongoing training of midwives has presented a challenge. Securing adequate equipment and supplies has also posed hurdles in rural areas. At the Baykurgan Community Rural Health Clinic in the Qibray District outside Tashkent, midwife Nabira Usmonova was conducting a clinic for some of the first time mothers in her district. The facility was clean, but it was sparsely furnished and contained only minimal equipment.

“We got all of our equipment in the past several years,” said Nabira. “For a clinic this size, serving 8000 people, it would be good to have more equipment such as ultra-sound.”

Midwife Nabira has worked in the same clinic for more than 30 years. The dedication and experience of midwives at the centre offers great reassurance to first time mothers like Shokhista Nazarchaeva, who was lying on the couch being examined.

At 22 years of age, the prospect of her first child was daunting. “Yes, I am nervous,” she admitted. “But the staff here put me at ease.”

Despite the problems facing Uzbekistan’s midwives, their skill and genuine care for their patients was obvious. “My wish is for my son to be healthy,” Shokhista said with a smile. “And that he might grow up to become a doctor.”

On 20th June 2011 the UNFPA and its partners launched the first ever “State of the World’s Midwifery” report in Durban, South Africa. The report, made publicly available during the Triennial Congress of the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), has unveiled new data confirming that there is a significant gap between the number of practicing midwives and the amount needed to prevent deaths during the delivery process. It argues that up to 3.6 million deaths could be avoided each year in 58 developing countries if midwifery services are upgraded by 2015.

By Rob McBride, UNFPA

For more information, please contact:
Aziza Askarova, ( 998 71) 120 6899, 281 5881/83
askarova@unfpa.org
UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, is an international development agency that promotes the right of every woman, man and child to enjoy a life of health and equal opportunity. UNFPA supports countries in using population data for policies and programmes to reduce poverty and to ensure that every pregnancy is wanted, every birth is safe, every young person is free of HIV/AIDS, and every girl and woman is treated with dignity and respect. UNFPA has been functioning in Uzbekistan since 1993 and is now implementing its third Country Programme (2010-2015) in close cooperation with national partners.