Blog Post
Cross-sector collaboration is needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals: Global Maternal Newborn Health Conference
published 2 November 2015
published 2 November 2015
Less than a month after the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were agreed by countries at the United Nations, this conference brought together both maternal and newborn health experts enthused by the need for integration and cross-sector cooperation – ways of working that are essential to meeting SDG targets. It was a true global conference, bringing together researchers, practitioners, advocates and policy makers, from around the world for three packed days of plenary and panel sessions, posters, skills demonstrations, a marketplace of ideas and auxiliary sessions and meetings.
The IDEAS team was well represented at the conference, taking part in two panel sessions. In one session Dr Neil Spicer presented ‘Catalysing scale-up of maternal and newborn child health innovations: A qualitative study in Ethiopia, Uttar Pradesh, India and Northeast Nigeria’. He described findings from two rounds of data collection, comprising over 200 semi-structured interviews, conducted in all three geographies, to explore the key actions that catalyse the scale-up of innovations and identify the contextual factors enabling or inhibiting scale-up. Dr Spicer has also written an article ‘Scaling-up is a craft not a science’ based on the first round of data collection on the scale-up of innovations.
In a simultaneous panel session, six IDEAS researchers presented findings from a number of studies under the title ‘District decision-making for health in low- and middle-income countries: Assessing the feasibility of a data-informed platform for health through multi-country studies’, moderated by Dr Joanna Schellenberg:
During the conference, the success of the Millennium Development Goals was feted, particularly the great strides that have been taken towards reducing the number of mothers and newborns who die of preventable causes. Plenary sessions were based on three key themes; quality, equity and integration of care.
Melinda Gates spoke about how life for a young woman in Malawi had changed, compared with the life of her mother. This young woman could choose to stay in a mothers’ home before the birth of her first child, learn parenting skills, give birth attended by a skilled birth attendant in an equipped delivery room, and receive the vaccinations for herself and her baby.
Dr Hans Rosling talked about how public understanding, particularly in high income countries is lagging behind the evidence of how things are in much of the rest of the world, and that the impact of innovations needs to be communicated better so that people’s perceptions catch up with reality.
Dr Joy Lawn, Professor of Epidemiology and Director of the Maternal, Adolescent, Reproductive and Child Health Centre at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine described integration as the process of making whole, to overcome disintegration. She said that the biggest barrier to the integration of maternal and newborn health care is the global community, which is being forced to think and do things differently because of the SDGs. She saw effective integration as both an opportunity and a challenge and suggested that two starting points were to communicate more clearly about what is needed from other sectors to improve maternal and newborn health and to start interacting with ‘un-likeminded people’ from those sectors.
The lessons from our work on catalysing scale-up of maternal and newborn health innovations could easily be applied to other sectors to encourage cross-sector learning, and the data-informed platform for health will aim to be multi-purpose benefiting officials making decisions on resources for health but also for other sectors.
As the IDEAS project’s results continue to emerge over the coming year, the messages of integration and cross-sectoral cooperation to achieve the SDGs will be in the forefront of our minds.