I want to emphasize that in many cases we're really talking about midwives. In my personal experience, I was outnumbered 40 to one by health professionals at the birth of my son. Our vision of what birth entails tends to be a little more high-end or high-tech than what we're talking about here.
I draw your attention to one of the charts in the documentation we have. It shows that Niger has a handful of midwives and 14,000 women who are dying every year in childbirth; Sri Lanka has 10,000 midwives and a handful of women who are dying every year. These aren't high-tech solutions; these are integrated, low-scale, and highly labour-intensive solutions, in many cases, but those are the investments that have a huge impact. That's why we want to ensure that the money we're putting into health care systems goes to health care services and not to the accountants following the money trail.