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Feb 19, 2026

‘Maternal deaths spike during war, instability’

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FA News Desk
Two expectant mothers attend a hospital in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. (file) © UNFPA Ukraine/Isaac Hurskin

Two expectant mothers attend a hospital in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv. (file) © UNFPA Ukraine/Isaac Hurskin

Nearly two thirds of all maternal deaths worldwide occur in countries marked by conflict or fragility, according to a report released on Tuesday by the World Health Organization (WHO) and partners.

The risk of a woman who lives in a country affected by conflict dying due to maternal causes is around five times higher for each pregnancy she undergoes compared to her peers in stable countries, according to new findings in the WHO report stated in a report of UN NEWS.

In 2023 alone, an estimated 160,000 women died from preventable maternal causes in fragile and conflict-affected settings, that is six in 10 maternal deaths worldwide, despite these countries accounting for only around one in 10 of global live births.

The new technical brief offers analysis as to why pregnant women living in certain countries are more likely to die in childbirth and confirms what many practitioners see on the ground: crises create conditions where health systems cannot consistently deliver lifesaving maternal care.

Indeed, the intersection of gender, ethnicity, age and migration status can increase the risk women and girls face who are both pregnant and living in fragile contexts, according to the brief, produced by WHO and an inter-agency group that includes the UN agencies for development, UNDP, sexual and reproductive health, UNFPA, and children, UNICEF, as well as the World Bank.

Countries classified as conflict-affected had an estimated maternal mortality ratio of 504 deaths per 100,000 live births, while in countries considered institutionally and socially fragile, it was 368. In contrast, countries outside both categories saw a much lower ratio of 99.

These findings deepen the picture provided in last year’s maternal mortality estimates for 2000 through 2023, which showed that global progress has stalled and that maternal mortality remains staggeringly high in low-income and crisis-affected settings, which spurred this further analysis.

Communities are adapting services to cultural needs, health workers are restoring disrupted services, hospitals are re-organising care under security threats and coordination mechanisms are evolving to ensure continuity of care.

With courtesy of UN NEWS