Melinda French Gates on Saving Lives
The co-chair of the world's largest philanthropy talks about what can be done to improve global health and poverty
- By Terence Monmaney
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
You have referred to mistakes as “learning opportunities.” Which have had the greatest impact on your thinking?
One thing that was driven home on my last trip to India was how important it is to pair the best science with a deep understanding of traditional cultures. I was in Rae Bareli, a rural village in northern India, to see a project called Shivgarh. This is a Johns Hopkins research site that our foundation and USAID funded together, and the goal is to decrease infant mortality. The first six months of the Shivgarh project was spent on research to understand current newborn care practices, with a focus on identifying the practices that lead to neonatal deaths, and analyzing the perceptions on which these practices are based.
The researchers found that most mothers didn’t understand the importance of skin-to-skin contact, immediate breast-feeding or keeping the umbilical cord clean. However, by making analogies to important local customs, health workers were able not just to tell women what to do but also to explain why they should do it. In less than two years, Shivgarh has seen a 54 percent reduction in neonatal deaths in the target areas.
Studies suggest development aid goes furthest if it is directed to women. Is that your experience?
The health of women is inextricably linked to the health of young children, families and entire communities. We invest in programs like Save the Children’s “Saving Newborn Lives” initiative, which helps pregnant women and their babies with simple strategies like increased access to skilled birth attendants and education about hygiene and breast-feeding. We also support programs to increase access to family planning and HIV prevention services in developing countries.
But agriculture may be the area where the special role of women in development is most clear. Most small farmers in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia are women, but a lot of agricultural interventions don’t take that into account. Some programs aim to increase the productivity of crops without understanding that higher production can mean that women have to work longer and harder in the field, leaving them less time to care for their households; that can undermine the welfare of the household in general. And we know that when a woman gets cash for her work, she is more likely than her husband to spend it on things like food and school fees.
In your travels, what experience has moved you most?
I was in Malawi earlier this year, and at a hospital in Dowa, I saw two newborn babies lying in an incubator, side by side. The first baby, who had just been born at the hospital, wasn’t breathing because of birth asphyxia. The baby turned purple, and I watched as the doctors worked to clear the lungs. They administered oxygen and were able to get the baby breathing again. The second baby was also born with birth asphyxia. Only that baby wasn’t born in the hospital; it was born a few hours before and brought to the clinic. For that baby, it was too late. That tragedy made it very clear what’s at stake with the newborn health work we’re investing in. The work our partners are doing to help mothers deliver their babies in a healthy environment saves lives.
It’s heartbreaking and inspiring to be in these rural villages and see what the mothers and fathers are up against—and how much they overcome. When I see that a baby in Malawi can be saved because she’s born in a hospital, I am filled with hope that a similar approach will work for mothers and babies in other countries. To know that real change is possible is what gives me optimism.
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Comments (4)
Thank you, Mrs. Gates, for putting to good use the ill-gotten gains of Microsoft (monopoly, illegal competition, sabotage, trade secret theft, etc.)! If you ever come to Indonesia to help, please be careful because the corruptors are so entrenched here that a large portion of the money and supplies will just slip into deep pockets and never reach the needy - just look at Aceh!
Posted by Glenn McGrew on November 2,2010 | 08:01 AM
If you are not inspired by the work and positive effect Bill and Malinda Gates have because of the massive amount of income they have, then you ought to look in your own life and ask what have I done lately? For those out there making a difference, the positive things happening around the world have a lot to do with you!
Thank-you for all you do.
Just some one effected by positive out put when things look glum.
Traci
Posted by Traci Lyman on July 21,2010 | 05:33 PM
I am Chairman of the John Dau (a Lost Boy of Sudan) Foundation. We have built a medical clinic at Duk Payuel, Jonglei State of South Sudan. We are in a very remote region where rain shuts down our means of transportation.
This week we lost a mother and child because she died because we could not perform a C-Section delivery. We could not transport her to a surgical unit 40 miles away.
We are experiencing the infant mortality Melinda describes so well.
We need Melinda's help so we can hire a Sudanese Doctor who can perform surgeries to save mother's and children's lives and our medical staff would not suffer so when they lose a Mother and child that they can't help. We need help.
Our website is www.johndaufoundation.org
Posted by John W Howard on July 20,2010 | 02:47 PM
Most inspiring interview I have read or heard in a long time.
Posted by Bob Wood on July 7,2010 | 11:39 PM