In Somalia, pregnant women face significant barriers that often delay access to care when they urgently need it. Most women have to give birth without the specialized medical support required to manage complications.
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been working at Bay Regional Hospital in Baidoa since 2017, providing a comprehensive full package of maternal and child health care including emergency obstetrics, prenatal and postnatal care, neonatal care, fistula repair, and specialized pediatric units. Recent funding cuts in humanitarian aid have triggered a catastrophic gap in services, and the pressure on facilities that remain functional is immense.
Shaheen BiBi, an MSF midwife activity manager at the Bay Regional Hospital, shares her experience treating women who make the journey seeking care.
She was carried in on a makeshift stretcher as the afternoon sun scorched the roof of our maternity ward. For two days, her family and a traditional birth attendant had tried everything they knew to help her deliver. Only when she began to bleed heavily did her husband decide to bring her to the MSF-supported Bay Regional Hospital.
By the time she reached us, she was unconscious. We did everything we could. Her baby made it, but she didn’t. She died a day later.