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      The answer for Indigenous mothers? Native midwives
      Vàng Tả Mẩy, village ethnic minority midwife, with Chảo Tả Mẩy, a mother in Nậm Giang 2 village of Nậm Chạc commune, Bát Xát district, Lao Cai province
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      The answer for Indigenous mothers? Native midwives

      Johnson & Johnson has helped support maternal and child health interventions that are improving lives around the world.

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      I could hear the jingling bells on the midwife’s handmade, traditional dress as I approached the top of the mountain in Nậm Giang 2 village in Lao Cai, Vietnam. Gasping for breath from the hike, I was greeted by the smiling traditional midwife, Vàng Tả Mẩy, who was visiting the home of a young mother in this community. Mẩy and this young mother are among 1.7 million Tày people, agriculturalists and the second-largest ethnic minority in Vietnam.

      Tày homes are far apart, with most not accessible by car, or even motorcycle. Tày midwives, many educated in a partnership between Johnson & Johnson and UNICEF, travel by foot up the mountains to visit soon-to-be moms, many of them girls between the ages of 15 and 20.

      Kangaroo care from a Hmong mother in Vietnam

      Kangaroo care from a Hmong mother in Vietnam.

      Photo courtesy of UNICEF Vietnam

      Mẩy shares information to ensure that pregnancies are healthy and that births take place in a health facility as much as possible. At the same time, the “local” hospital, which is still a long walk plus a two-hour drive on winding mountain roads, aims to provide high-quality and culturally sensitive care with an emphasis on midwifery education and low-tech interventions.

      “The support from Johnson & Johnson has contributed to initial introduction and national wide scale-up of effective maternal and child health interventions in Vietnam—for instance, early essential newborn care and Kangaroo Mother Care [skin-to-skin contact],” says Dr. Nguyen Huy Du, Maternal and Child Health Specialist, UNICEF.

      Vietnam, like many low- or middle-income countries, showed improvement in maternal and newborn mortality during the era of the Millennium Development Goals, but a gap remains between disadvantaged groups and more privileged groups. Poverty, education, language and geography are among the many barriers to healthcare. Ethnicity may have a direct effect on health inequity, above income and education—Indigenous people comprise 5% of the world population, but they make up 15% of the extreme poor.

      The UNICEF Vietnam and Johnson & Johnson teams learn about the challenges for Tày midwives and mothers in Vietnam; from left to right, Dr. Phạm Thị Kim Thoa (Provincial Reproductive Health Center, Lao Cai province), Joy Marini (Johnson & Johnson), Vàng Tả Mẩy (Nậm Giang 2 village ethnic minority midwife), Chảo Tả Mẩy (mother), Nguyen Thu Hằng (Johnson & Johnson Vietnam), Bùi Thị Hồng Nguyện (community midwife) and Dr. Pham Bich Ha (UNICEF consultant)

      The UNICEF Vietnam and Johnson & Johnson teams learn about the challenges for Tày midwives and mothers in Vietnam; from left to right, Dr. Phạm Thị Kim Thoa (Provincial Reproductive Health Center, Lao Cai province), Joy Marini (Johnson & Johnson), Vàng Tả Mẩy (Nậm Giang 2 village ethnic minority midwife), Chảo Tả Mẩy (mother), Nguyen Thu Hằng (Johnson & Johnson Vietnam), Bùi Thị Hồng Nguyện (community midwife) and Dr. Pham Bich Ha (UNICEF consultant)

      Photo courtesy of UNICEF Vietnam

      In the Sustainable Development Goals, Indigenous people are referenced only six times, and not at all in SDG 3, which is defined as: “Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.”

      Globally, inequity in healthcare is often most discernible for Indigenous people during pregnancy and birth. Higher rates of home births lead to high maternal and neonatal mortality rates. Current solutions range from forcing Native women to travel to birth centers, to medicalization of birth, but these approaches do not address cultural issues, such as a view in some groups that birth is a ceremony with important rituals or celebration, rather than a medical process.

      To achieve the Sustainable Development Goals for mothers and newborns, we must:

      • Ensure that communities have a skilled, Indigenous midwife, who understands local culture
      • Deliver healthcare in native languages
      • Include Indigenous people in decision-making and planning for healthcare
      • Learn from Indigenous groups, who experience birth as part of their connection to community, history and the land
      • Disaggregate data to make Indigenous women visible, and understand their unique experiences during pregnancy and childbirth
      • Support solutions developed by Indigenous communities from government, civil society and the private sector
      “I had the chance to practice assisting 15 cases of delivery at a provincial hospital during the training and I feel confident now to support mothers who deliver in my village.”
      Vàng Tả Mẩy

      Programs such as the Bolivian government’s midwifery training program for Indigenous midwives are already showing promise in saving the lives of mothers and babies. And there is a growing recognition that mainstream hospital practices are not always respectful of Native women, resulting in a resurgence of Indigenous midwifery in Canada and the United States.

      With a promise to “leave no one behind,” the SDGs present an opportunity for us to recognize and learn from Native people who bring to us cultural traditions and a hope for a rich, diverse future. A welcoming community of women who receive local, respectful care could be one answer to the healthcare gap for Indigenous people.

      As the bells on her dress whispered in the Lao Cai mountain breeze, Tày midwife Mẩy proudly said, “This community knows me and trusts me. I have lived here all of my life.”

      May 5 marks International Day of the Midwife. Follow @JNJGlobalHealth on Twitter and Instagram for more on the role midwives and midwifery leaders play in a healthy, safe and equitable world.

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