Thank you.
Thailand, as I said, is just one example. We could give you Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and in fact Brazil. Brazil is probably the most recent example where they have managed to reduce the under-five death rate and they've now managed to get free primary health care for everyone. All Brazilians have access to skilled attendants at birth. They now have to work on other issues, such as the quality of the care that is being delivered, but they do now have that. So that's been a huge undertaking, because we often still see inequities in poor countries between the richest and the poorest quintiles in both maternal and child health. Brazil deserves a great deal of credit for that.
So I think that Thailand's success story, mirrored by others--and Janet and Jill probably can also answer this--is interesting in many ways, because it really does involve the community. You need to involve the community. Often we have traditional birth attendants in villages who attend mothers if they don't give birth alone, and those were substituted by certified village midwives.
Now, I don't have the specifics of how long they would train for in Thailand. There are some other countries where midwives are being trained for less than the four years that we train our midwives here in Canada, and we can debate the merits of that. But six months is a bare minimum for training. They are trained close to the village and go back to the village.
What happens is as you begin the training, you scale it up over time. You can see in this graph what happens when you start training and then when you scale it up.
In fact, what's really fascinating.... I do have a slide that's not in this set that takes you back to the Taj Mahal, which is a monument to a woman who died of a postpartum hemorrhage after giving birth to her fifteenth child. At that time Sweden also had a high maternal mortality rate, and the queen of Sweden decided that she was going to start a midwifery training school. The rest is history in terms of what happened in Sweden with maternal mortality.
Yet in India until very recently--the most recent figures for India are showing progress--the most common cause of death, as with the rest of the world's women, is still postpartum hemorrhage.