State of the world’s mothers

The US-based humanitarian organisation Save the Children has just published its ninth annual ‘State of the World’s Mothers’ report to coincide with the commemoration of Mothers Day. Quite a contrast to the celebratory gift-giving and card exchange that now define Mothers Day, the report, while it highlights some of the best places in the world today for mothers and children, concentrates on some of the worst in an attempt to look at what can be done to improve those at the bottom of the list. This list is bottom heavy and Save the Children rightly believes that there are areas that can be worked on – such as health care, education and economies – to pull those bottom-rung countries out of the pit.

As they have for years, Nordic countries came out on top.  Sweden heads the list, followed by Norway, Iceland and, surprisingly, New Zealand. Denmark, Australia, Finland, Ireland, Germany and France round out the top ten. New Zealand’s listing was a surprise given recent investigations and interventions into the lives and treatment of the Maoris in that country, especially with regard to child abuse.

Among other developed countries, the United Kingdom hit the list at number 14, Canada at 20 and the United States at 27. Meanwhile in the bottom ten among the least developed countries were Ethiopia, Mali, Dijbouti, Eritrea, Guinea-Biseau, Angola, Sierra Leone, Yemen, Chad and Niger in that order.  Guyana, which was listed among less developed countries came in at 36 on that list, but at 77 on the general listing. It was behind Suriname at 34/75; Trinidad and Tobago 23/64; Jamaica 62/21 and Barbados 6/47.

According to Save the Children, the survey criteria, which determined list placement, included the lifetime risk of maternal mortality; percentage of women using modern contraception and female life expectancy. It also examined expected number of years of formal schooling for females; estimated female-to-male earned income; participation of women in national government; mortality rate for children under five years old; and percentage of population with access to safe water among others.