Concept Note. Midwifery Symposium Young Midwives in the Lead Women Deliver 2016

Similar documents
REPRODUCTIVE, MATERNAL, NEWBORN AND CHILD HEALTH (RMNCH) GLOBAL AND REGIONAL INITIATIVES

Post-MDG Perspectives on Midwifery as a Key Component of MNH Strategies

Monitoring of the achievement of the health-related Millennium Development Goals

Ending preventable maternal and child mortality

2017 PROGRESS REPORT on the Every Woman Every Child Global Strategy for Women s, Children s and Adolescents Health

GIVING BIRTH SHOULD NOT BE A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH

World Health Organization. A Sustainable Health Sector

Countdown to 2015: tracking progress, fostering accountability

THE GLOBAL STRATEGY FOR WOMEN S, CHILDREN S AND ADOLESCENTS HEALTH ( )

2016 United Nations Political Declaration on Ending AIDS sets world on the Fast-Track to end the epidemic by 2030

Concept note. 1. Background and rationale

On 24 May 2005 the Council (GAERC), in its formation of Development Ministers, adopted the conclusions in Annex I.

ADVOCACY IN ACTION TO ACHIEVE GENDER EQUALITY AND THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS IN KENYA

39th Meeting of the UNAIDS Programme Coordinating Board Geneva, Switzerland. 6-8 December 2016

The road towards universal access

H4+: Working Together for Maternal and Newborn Health

10.4 Advocacy, Communication and Social Mobilization Working Group: summary strategic plan,

Terms of Reference. Technical Specialist, Reproductive, Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health (RMNCAH) Official Job Title: Grade (Classified) P-4

Republic of Malawi SPEECH BY THE GUEST OF HONOUR, MINISTER OF HEALTH, HONOURABLE DR PETER KUMPALUME, MP AT THE OFFICAL OPENING OF

The Global Fund & UNICEF Partnership

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

Where is the M(oney) in MNCH?

Reaching Every Woman and Every Child through Partnership.

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

ASEAN Activities on Increasing Access to ARV and HIV Related Supplies

TERMS OF REFERENCE CAM Association Strengthening Consultants Strengthening Midwifery Services (SMS) Project, South Sudan

Working at UNFPA. Because everyone counts

Highlights of the Annual Report to the Economic and Social Council

General Assembly. United Nations A/63/152/Add.1

DECLARATION OF THE 4 TH WORLD CONGRESS OF RURAL WOMEN HELD AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION CENTER, DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA: APRIL 2007

Commonwealth Secretariat

Global health sector strategies on HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections ( )

BUDGET AND RESOURCE ALLOCATION MATRIX

Fifty-fourth session Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, 30 August 3 September 2004

DELIVERING HOPE AND SAVING LIVES INVESTING IN MIDWIFERY

PROVIDING EMERGENCY OBSTETRIC AND NEWBORN CARE

OPERATIONAL FRAMEWORK. for the Global Strategy for Women s, Children s and Adolescents Health

Implementation Plan on Advocacy to Improve Maternal Newborn and Child Health

Okinawa, Toyako, and Beyond: Progress on Health and Development

GUIDANCE FOR MAKING A COMMITMENT TO EVERY WOMAN EVERY CHILD

Population Council Strategic Priorities Framework

5 th Islamic Conference of Health Ministers. Resolution. Istanbul, Turkey November 2015 (5-7 Safar 1437H)

NCDs in the Post-2015 Development Agenda

UNICEF Strategic Plan, January 2018

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

PROMOTING FINANCIAL AND HUMAN RESOURCES FOR FAMILY PLANNING AND MATERNAL HEALTH

Message from. Dr Samlee Plianbangchang Regional Director, WHO South-East Asia. At the

Uniting the world against AIDS

INVESTING IN A NEW FINANCING MODEL FOR THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ERA

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

MATERNAL HEALTH IN AFRICA

Monitoring the achievement of the health-related Millennium Development Goals

LOGFRAME FOR LESOTHO

Catalytic Framework to End AIDS, TB and Eliminate Malaria in Africa by 2030

1. The World Bank-GAVI Partnership and the Purpose of the Review

Universal Access to Reproductive Health: Strengthening Institutional Capacity. Why? What? And How?

Options for meeting Myanmar s commitment to achieving MDG 5

1.2 Building on the global momentum

Monitoring the achievement of the health-related Millennium Development Goals

Post 2015 Agenda. Mike Battcock Civil Society Department

Where do we go from here?

SEA-FHR-1. Life-Course. Promoting Health throughout the. Department of Family Health and Research Regional Office for South-East Asia

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

The Power of Partnership

SPECIAL EVENT ON PHILANTHROPY AND THE GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH AGENDA. 23 February 2009, United Nations, New York Conference Room 2, 3:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.

XIII International Inter-Ministerial Conference on Population and Development November 2016 Dakar, Senegal

Economic and Social Council

Lesson 3: Global Partnerships

UNICEF Strategic Plan,

Intervention from the World Health Organization

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

UNAIDS Management Response to the MOPAN Assessment

The Training Partnership of the Inter-Agency Working Group (IAWG) on Reproductive Health in Crisis Situations

Introduction and Every Woman, Every Child

Accelerating action towards elimination of cervical cancer: Social Media Messaging Toolkit

Social determinants of health: outcome of the World Conference on Social Determinants of Health (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, October 2011)

COMMUNICATION ON ENGAGEMENT Reporting on MI s engagement with the private sector

Background. Proposed to develop a framework for action. Address by Foreign Minister Koumura

Global Health Post 2015: Accelerating Equity

Follow-up to the high-level meetings of the United Nations General Assembly on health-related issues

The Economic and Social Council, Recalling the United Nations Millennium Declaration13 and the 2005 World Summit Outcome, 1

DECLARATION. Inaugural. Post-2015: Desired Outcomes February 2015 United Nations Headquarters. United Nations

Gender inequality and genderbased

The Strategy Development Process. Global Fund and STOP TB Consultation Istanbul, Turkey 24 July 2015

ASEAN Declaration of Commitment on HIV and AIDS: Fast-Tracking and Sustaining HIV and AIDS Responses To End the AIDS Epidemic by 2030

African Health Development & Financing Parliamentary Policy & Budget Action Plan

WHO Global Health Sector Strategies HIV; Viral Hepatitis; Sexually Transmitted Infections

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme and of the United Nations Population Fund

UNFPA TUNISIA EDITORIAL NEWSLETTER N 04 IN THIS ISSUE. January - April 2015

TUBERCULOSIS AND HIV/AIDS: A STRATEGY FOR THE CONTROL OF A DUAL EPIDEMIC IN THE WHO AFRICAN REGION. Report of the Regional Director.

A NEW FINANCING MODEL FOR THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ERA

REPUBLIC OF ZAMBIA MINISTRY OF HEALTH

Copenhagen, Denmark, September August Malaria

NCD Alliance Common Interest Group Call 17 July 2012

World Food Programme (WFP)

STRATEGIC PLAN

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

Giving voice to youth. A guidance brief for UNFPA on the Youth Advisory Group of the UNFPA SUB REGIONAL OFFICE FOR THE CARIBBEAN

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

Working for an International Organization in Public-Private Partnership : The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria

Transcription:

Concept Note Midwifery Symposium Young Midwives in the Lead Women Deliver 2016 Background On 25 th September 2015, world leaders from 193 countries unanimously adopted a historic set of 17 Sustainable Development Goals with 169 targets on eliminating poverty, achieving gender equality, and securing health and well-being for all people. While the last decade and a half saw great progress in addressing maternal and child mortality which reduced by almost half globally from the 1990 levels, the new global policy agenda sets the bar much higher. The objective under the health Goal inter alia is to bring down by 2030, maternal mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 live births; end preventable deaths of newborns and children under 5 years of age and bring down neonatal mortality to at least 12 per 1,000 live births and under 5 mortality to at least 25 per 1,000 live births; end the epidemics of HIV, TB and malaria; and to substantially increase health financing and recruitment, education and retention of health workers. Clearly, if these ambitious targets are to be achieved, investments in quality midwifery education, services and workforce policies need to be rapidly scaled up and strengthened. Since 2008, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in collaboration with the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), the World Health Organization (WHO) and other H4+ partners (UNICEF, World Bank, UN Women, UNAIDS), Jhpiego and other civil society and private sector partners has been spearheading a global midwifery movement. Globally, UNFPA with partners have supported global dissemination of WHO/ICM education standards, strengthening of associations and regulatory policies in over 65 countries. The evidence generated in the recent State of the World s Midwifery Report 2014 1 makes a strong case for investing in midwifery services and workforce policies to eliminate preventable maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity while the most recent Lancet series 2 on midwifery clearly shows that universal coverage of Midwifery with both family planning and interventions for maternal and newborn health could avert a total of 83% of all maternal deaths, stillbirths, and neonatal deaths. 1 UNFPA, WHO, ICM, 2014. The State of the World s Midwifery Report 2014: A universal pathway, a woman s right to health. New York: UNFPA 2 http://www.thelancet.com/series/midwifery; Homer, C et al, The projected effect of scaling up midwifery, Volume 384, No. 9948, p1146 1157, 20 September 2014 1

In their commitment to the UN Secretary General s Global Strategy for Women s, Children s and Adolescent s Health, a number of countries have decided to invest in human resources for health, in particular midwives, and significant progress is becoming visible in many countries. A number of programmes, including the UNFPA/ICM midwifery programme, the WHO/AFRO new pre-service education curricula, the South East Asia Region Roadmap for Midwifery Services, are assisting governments in revising plans, strengthening training and education programmes and regulations, with the goal to improving access to skilled health care for women and their newborns. Midwifery workforce assessments have been conducted or are ongoing in six of the countries with high numbers of maternal and newborn deaths. UNFPA and ICM in collaboration with the H4+, civil society and private sector partners organized two high profile Midwifery Symposia in 2010 and 2013 3 as pre Women Deliver events. These were well attended by a few hundred midwives, high level policy makers, programme managers and partners. Both resulted in strong global commitments and calls to action by partners to make a fundamental push for enhanced investments in midwives and midwifery services; improved midwifery education to ensure competent midwives; effective recruitment and deployment of midwives; promotion of woman-centered care; regulation of midwives and other providers of midwifery services; support for midwifery associations; and better data collection and research on midwifery as a way to reach MDGs 4, 5 and 6. A third Midwifery Symposium titled Call the Midwife: A Conversation About the Rising Global Midwifery Movement was organized by UNFPA, the Government of Sweden and the Woodrow Wilson Center 4 on 23 March 2015 in Washington DC. Global experts and midwifery practitioners discussed the latest evidence from the Lancet series; learned about the progress in various global midwifery initiatives and midwifery related achievements and challenges in Afghanistan, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Liberia South Sudan, and discussed innovative programmes and technologies to scale up midwifery capacities through public-private partnerships. These symposia, together with broader efforts by governments and partners to strengthen midwifery using the three ICM pillars of Education, Regulation and Association (ERA), have contributed towards placing midwifery front and center of global, regional and country strategies to eliminate preventable maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity. Midwifery workforce policies, retention and distribution mechanisms, however, remain weak. Most importantly, respectful maternal care needs to be enhanced. A number of midwives associations lack strength and organizational skills and are often unable to advocate effectively 3 Second Global Midwifery Symposium Strengthening Quality Midwifery Care: Making Strides, Addressing Challenges 26 27 May 2013, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 4 Ranked among the top 10 Think Tanks in the United States 2

for midwifery or support their members. Moreover, the profession of midwifery is still not adequately regulated and respected in a number of countries. There is an urgent need to improve and scale up midwifery education, including improvements in midwifery philosophy, professional values/ethics and advocacy skills, so that midwives themselves can provide quality midwifery care and become champions for the health of women and girls in their countries. As the era of the Millennium Development Goals draws to a close in 2015 and with the launching of the new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs / 2016-2030) towards which the UN system and 193 countries have pledged their commitment, the upcoming Women Deliver Conference in Copenhagen from the 16-19 May 2016 offers an excellent opportunity to draw the attention of world leaders to the contributions that midwives can make in achieving the sexual and reproductive health and universal health care agenda of the SDG and to improve the health and well-being of women, their babies and their communities. Proposal of Midwifery Symposium at Women Deliver 2016 UNFPA in collaboration with the ICM, WHO, H4+ and civil society partners like Jhpiego, AMREF and others, proposes to once again organize a 1.5 day Midwifery Symposium immediately preceding Women Deliver on 15-16 May. The aim would be to support and harmonize the voices of young midwife leaders in strongly advocating for quality midwifery care in identifying solutions to maternal and newborn health issues. A leadership orientation training for young midwives will be conducted on 14 May by UNFPA, ICM and partners in collaboration with the Danish Midwives Association. Professional translation in French and Spanish will be provided for the 1.5 day Symposium and informally for the 1 day leadership orientation. The Symposium will draw young midwife leaders (YML) under the age of 35 (from both the North and the South) who have demonstrated leadership potential in their countries in myriad of ways, such as strengthening and improving midwifery workforce policies; strengthening associations; improving midwifery service delivery; enhancing access to quality midwifery services in remote rural communities etc. and have learned from their experience. Dedicated and dynamic young midwives with leadership potential working both in communities and at the national level will be considered. In addition, some selected policy makers, senior/experienced midwives and midwife leaders, advocates, journalists, civil society partners, H4+ agencies and private sector will also be invited to discuss and brainstorm on SRH initiatives with the young midwife leaders on how best global efforts can be galvanized to achieve the SRH, including maternal and newborn health goals and targets of the SDGs. Symposium Title (Tbc): Date: Venue: Leadership Orientation: Young Midwives in the Lead or Voices of Young Midwife leaders 15-16 May, 2016 (end at around noon 16 May) Bella Center (UNFPA will do the contract) 14 May 2016 (tbc by the Danish Midwives Association) 3

Symposium Objectives: a) Enhance the ability of young midwives with leadership potential to become powerful strategic leaders and advocates, and to engage in national policy dialogues with a stronger evidence-based voice. b) Highlight the role that midwives can play in achieving the new SDGs and to enhance their potential for fulfilling this role through increased knowledge about latest research findings and data (Lancet, State of the World s Midwifery Report) as well as about emerging issues at national, regional and global level. c) Create a global network of young midwife leaders (YML) to serve as a forum for exchanging good practices in scaling up midwifery and latest innovations in improving quality of midwifery care in order to enable the young midwives to have a wider impact across the entire health and social care system. d) Showcase how investments in YML from both the South and the North can help improve quality of care within midwifery practice; highlighting the importance of investment in research, advocacy, mentorship and leadership skills of young midwife leaders. Symposium Outcome: 1) Joint declaration of commitment from the young midwives and the supporting global partners to enable the midwives to serve as advocates and providers of quality midwifery care in their countries 2) Identifying the support midwives need from the global community, regional and national partners to fulfil the commitment Note: The young midwife leaders attending the Symposium will be requested to spread certain key messages during the entire Women Deliver by participating actively in various events and helping to raise the profile of midwifery. Partners will be requested to highlight the Symposium discussions and outcome in the various panels in which they participate. Symposium Participants: Maximum 100 participants, comprising young (below 35 years) aspiring midwife leaders from both north and south, midwifery programme managers, policy makers, UN H4+/civil society/private sector partners, and donors. (Note: The leadership orientation training on the 14 th will be limited to the young midwives who have demonstrated leadership potential and the key facilitators to the training) Scholarships to 30 Young Midwife leaders: 4

UNFPA, and partners will offer approx. 30 scholarships to young midwife leaders on the basis of a clear selection criteria which will be determined jointly. A call for applications will be issued globally and young midwife leaders from low and middle income developing countries as well as developed countries would be encouraged to apply by submitting a proposal/essay on the midwifery situation in their country; the leadership role they have been playing in strengthening midwifery in their communities or at national level and suggesting effective solutions in scaling up and accelerating progress in access to quality midwifery services. The applicants would need to further specify how they would personally contribute to the strategies they propose in scaling up midwifery services in their country. Majority (at least two thirds) of the scholarships would be reserved for the high burden maternal mortality countries. The successful applicants are to be informed no later than 29 th February. A selection committee would review the applications based on the specified criteria to be defined (e.g. quality of proposal, relevant experience, geographic representation etc) Symposium Agenda The agenda will be determined in a participatory manner by the partners supporting the Symposium. Periodic monthly and later bi-weekly teleconferences would be held to discuss participation, scholarships, agenda, advocacy etc. Once speakers are identified UNFPA, ICM and WHO would issue a joint invitation letter to the identified speakers. A one day meeting on leadership development will be provided to the sponsored participants prior to the symposium. Some suggestions for agenda include: Discussions along key identified issues: Role of Midwifery under the new SDGs; strengthening midwifery capacities (education, regulation and association) and retention; respectful care during maternity and respect for the profession; Midwifery Education; Midwifery and Quality of care; Gender and Midwifery; Midwifery and Global Health. An innovative format of the agenda will be defined in group discussions with the sponsoring partners. The structure could include various interactive elements of debates, panels, group work, lectures and round tables. For example, there could be a round table where the young midwives could present a key midwifery bottleneck in their country and seek solution from others. In addition to the participants, speakers and facilitators, the supporting partners will be asked to nominate a few representatives to attend the Symposium, mainly as observers and facilitators. 5

As indicated the Symposium would conclude with a pledge/commitment by the young midwife leaders and the key global partners, possibly also covering their recommendations for global and national support for strengthening key suggested strategies in scaling up midwifery in their countries. Women Deliver organising committee will be requested to mainstream the outcome document within the outcome documents of WD and in High level Panels of the Conference to promote Midwifery as a key strategy for achieving the health goal of the SDGs. Key Organizers: United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), The International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), World Health Organization and other multilateral, civil society and private sector partners (H4+, Danish Midwives Association, Jhpiego, AMREF, Woodrow Wilson Center, AMDD, ACNM, ACOG, Laerdal Global Health, Johnson & Johnson, WRA, PMNCH, donors etc). Coordinator and Symposium Secretariat: The coordination of the Symposium would be done by UNFPA. Funding: Funding for the Symposium needs to be generated. Donor support is needed to pay for the following: a) 30 scholarships for young midwives with leadership potential to support their travel to attend the Symposium, Women Deliver registration charges, per diem for their stay and airport transfer expense. b) Logistics venue costs, tea/coffee breaks, AV equipment, lunch on 15 May c) Translation expenses d) Advocacy & communication expenses e) 1 day pre-leadership training workshop for scholarship holders 6