Abstract

This study investigates a puzzle concerning global health priorities—why do comparable issues receive differential levels of attention and resources? It considers maternal and neonatal mortality, two high-burden issues that pertain to groups at risk at birth and whose lives could be saved with effective intrapartum care. Why did maternal survival gain status as a global health priority earlier and to a greater degree than newborn survival? Higher mortality and morbidity burdens among newborns and the cost-effectiveness of interventions would seem to predict that issue's earlier and higher prioritization. Yet maternal survival emerged as a priority two decades earlier and had attracted considerably more attention and resources by the close of the Millennium Development Goals era. This study uses replicative process-tracing case studies to examine the emergence and growth of political priority for these two issues, probing reasons for unexpected variance. The study finds that maternal survival's grounding as a social justice issue spurred growth of a strong and diverse advocacy network and aligned the issue with powerful international norms (e.g. expectations to advance women's rights and the Millennium Development Goals), drawing attention and resources to the issue over three decades. Newborn survival's disadvantage stems from its long status as an issue falling under the umbrellas of maternal and child survival but not fully adopted by these networks, and with limited appeal as a public health issue advanced by a small and technically focused network; network expansion and alignment with child survival norms have improved the issue's status in the past few years.

Highlights

  • This study investigates a puzzle concerning global health prioritiesdwhy do comparable issues receive differential levels of attention and resources? It considers maternal and neonatal mortality, two highburden issues that pertain to groups at risk at birth and whose lives could be saved with effective intrapartum care

  • Maternal survival emerged as a global health priority earlier and has risen higher on the international health and development policy agendas than has newborn survival

  • Maternal and child survival networks failed to bring newborn survival more fully into their folds; as a result, the emergent newborn survival network faced the early task of establishing the issue as one that deserved agenda status alongside two issues perceived to already cover it

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Summary

Introduction

This study investigates a puzzle concerning global health prioritiesdwhy do comparable issues receive differential levels of attention and resources? It considers maternal and neonatal mortality, two highburden issues that pertain to groups at risk at birth and whose lives could be saved with effective intrapartum care. The study finds that maternal survival's grounding as a social justice issue spurred growth of a strong and diverse advocacy network and aligned the issue with powerful international norms (e.g. expectations to advance women's rights and the Millennium Development Goals), drawing attention and resources to the issue over three decades. Many factors understood to facilitate the ascendance of issues on policy agendas apply to maternal and newborn survival, concerned respectively with reducing preventable deaths to pregnant women and newborn babies Their global mortality and morbidity burdens are high; an estimated 2.7 million neonates and 303,000 women die annually, while neonatal conditions comprise 202 million and maternal conditions 16 million disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) By 2030, reduce the global maternal newborns and children under 5 years of mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 age, with all countries aiming to reduce live births neonatal mortality to at least as low as 12 per 1,000 live births and under-5 mortality to at least as low as 25 per 1,000 live births

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