Sustainability

MSD for Mothers: Helping end maternal mortality

More than a decade of strategic partnerships, private sector innovation and data-driven impact to help create a world where no woman has to die while giving life

September 14, 2022

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Giving birth can be one of the most beautiful and joyous experiences in a woman’s life, but for many — too many — it can be a scary and tragic event.

According to the World Health Organization, approximately 295,000 women died globally during and following childbirth in 2017. Most of these deaths (94%) occurred in low- and middle-income countries. Most of these deaths could have been prevented.

If we don’t do more, mothers, daughters and granddaughters will continue to lose their lives. And their loss will impact many.

Ken Frazier quote

The birth of MSD for Mothers

In 2011, in response to this crisis, our company created MSD for Mothers, a $500 million global initiative to help create a world where no woman has to die while giving life.

“By helping address one of the oldest and most preventable global health tragedies, we believe MSD for Mothers will have an important impact on society,” said Ken Frazier, MSD’s chairman and then-CEO, as he introduced this new program at the United Nations (UN) General Assembly.

MSD for Mothers began its mission by joining the UN and collaborators around the globe to apply its scientific and business expertise to help save women’s lives, aligned with Sustainable Development Goal 3.1 to reduce the global maternal mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 births by 2030. Achieving this goal would save the lives of approximately 1.4 million women between 2016 and 2030.

A sustainable model to make a difference for generations

Focused on advancing high-quality maternity care, harnessing innovations for maternal health and catalyzing solutions that respond to local needs, MSD for Mothers aims to make a difference for women and their communities now and in the future.

A man holding a picture of a loved one in a church

Women around the world die during pregnancy and childbirth for a variety of reasons, including a lack of medical supplies or inadequate health care services to address complications. Other times, it’s due to delays in seeking care or difficulties getting to a medical facility. Sometimes, women can’t afford to pay for health services. And often, women do not have information about or access to contraceptives to help them make their own decisions about whether or not to become pregnant.

MSD for Mothers takes a holistic approach to addressing the many factors that impact maternal health. It collaborates across sectors — working with governments, nongovernmental organizations, patient groups, professional associations, entrepreneurs, UN agencies, research institutions, businesses and even other pharmaceutical companies. The initiative also supports innovations across digital, finance, products and policy, and strives to leverage the private sector for public good. Engaging local stakeholders in designing, implementing and evaluating solutions plays an important role in creating sustainable improvements.

“When we invest in mothers, we help build a better future for all."

Mary-Ann Etiebet

Lead, MSD for Mothers

“We’re constantly looking for ways to further scale this impact and, as importantly, make sure it’s sustainable. We share our findings and the lessons we’re learning across countries, so others can use them,” says Etiebet. “We want to ensure that we not only make a difference for today, but for generations to come.”

Making an impact and the ripple effect

For 10 years and counting, MSD for Mothers has worked alongside more than 150+ collaborators in more than 60 global sites to find, test, scale and sustain solutions to reduce maternal mortality.

“Our programs directly reach women and health systems. Since 2011, we have helped nearly 18 million women have healthier pregnancies and safer childbirths around the world through programs promoting safe, high quality, respectful care,” says Etiebet.

100M+

people reached through improved access to quality facilities

18M

women with access to programs supporting safe, high quality, respectful care

324,000

providers with improved training

And, research shows that investing in maternal health can have a ripple effect. Better maternal health care is a pathway to a lifetime of benefits, both for a woman’s own health and prosperity as well as that of her children, family, community and nation.

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Infants 15 times more likely to survive

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Children 10 times more likely to finish school

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Millions of dollars contributed by women to the economy

“When we invest in maternal health, we ensure that hundreds of thousands of women survive pregnancy and childbirth. When that happens, newborns are more likely to survive, children are more likely to stay in school, women are able to make invaluable contributions to their communities and the workforce, health systems are stronger and nations’ economies grow,” explains Etiebet. “We call this the ‘Mom Effect.'”

And, that’s an important impact on society for generations to come.

Ken Frazier visiting with a patient

2011

Ken Frazier announces launch of MSD for Mothers 

Pregnant woman in the garden

MSD for Mothers and PATH collaborate to identify game-changing technologies

Spearheaded by top scientists from MSD for Mothers and the global nonprofit, PATH, this unique alliance evaluated promising technologies that address the two leading causes of maternal mortality — post-partum hemorrhage (PPH) and preeclampsia — as well as family planning. This collaboration surfaced the ideas of focusing on a heat-stable uterotonic (carbetocin) to address excessive bleeding during childbirth and optimizing magnesium sulfate administration for pregnant women with preeclampsia – two initiatives that we continue to fund today.

2012

MSD for Mothers joins new global partnership — Saving Mothers, Giving Life

This public-private partnership focuses on helping mothers during labor, delivery and the first 24 hours following birth, when an estimated two-thirds of maternal deaths and almost half of infant deaths occur. With a pledge of more than $200 million, the partnership began with programs in Uganda and Zambia, where maternal mortality rates are disproportionately high.

mother holding her baby
Pregnant woman in India and a child in the background

2013

MSD for Mothers launches $10 million initiative in India

This initiative to improve access to maternal health services will reach nearly 500,000 pregnant women in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Jharkhand — all areas with high rates of maternal deaths.

pregnant woman being examined by a nurse

Global health, development and business leaders announce new innovative financing partnership

This partnership leverages private sector funding to speed up delivery and access to life-saving health supplies, such as contraceptives, bed nets, and medicines to those in need. Through Pledge Guarantee for Health (PGH), this new financing mechanism helps increase the impact of each dollar of donor funding and ultimately improve health care access and outcomes for the millions who are helped by foreign aid.

Through the partnership, MSD and other private sector suppliers step up to provide up-front price discounts to aid recipients who utilize PGH to purchase their life-saving health supplies.

woman holding baby smiling

MSD for Mothers launches programs in the U.S.

The maternal mortality rate in the U.S. has nearly doubled since 1990. More than 50,000 women a year — one every 10 minutes — nearly die from severe complications they experience during pregnancy or childbirth. With an initial commitment of $6 million, these programs aim to enhance community care initiatives for high-risk women before, during and after childbirth; implement standard approaches to address obstetric emergencies; and strengthen data collection and reviews to better understand why maternal deaths occur and how to improve practices and patient care.

3 women holding babies and one pregnant woman in Kenya

2014

MSD, Ferring Pharmaceuticals and WHO announce collaboration to prevent excessive bleeding in women after childbirth

MSD, Ferring Pharmaceuticals and WHO collaborate to advance a new, proprietary formulation of carbetocin to prevent excessive bleeding in women after childbirth. A primary benefit of carbetocin is its ability to remain stable at room temperature, even in hot and tropical climates, unlike oxytocin, the standard medicine administered for the prevention of PPH. Oxytocin is temperature-sensitive and requires sustained cold distribution and storage, which is difficult to achieve in many of these areas of high maternal mortality.

mother holding her child

2015

MSD for Mothers explores digital technologies to mobilize maternal health 

MSD for Mothers commits resources to invent or enhance existing solutions to tackle some of the most critical obstacles standing in the way of delivering quality maternity care and contraceptive services in low- and middle-income countries. This commitment leads to a new wave of smart, innovative apps and digital platforms – like the Safe Delivery App, mDoc, Project iDeliver, AskNivi, MomCare, Together for Her Health, among others.

mother and baby at the market

MSD and MSD for Mothers help advance a new set of UN global goals

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are formally adopted at the 70th UNGA. They represent the international community’s aspirations for improving the lives of the world’s poorest people by 2030.

mother holding her new baby

MSD for Mothers has now reached 5 million women worldwide through its programs

MSD for mamas care packages

2016

Employees across the globe join the fight to end maternal mortality

Employee volunteers participate in activities such as assembling post-natal kits for soon-to-be mothers in Uganda as a means of encouraging them to seek care to support healthy pregnancies and deliveries. The kits include essential supplies to aid the health and safety of a mother and newborn after birth. This activity, among others, become annual events where employees can help amplify our impact. 

MSD for Mothers’ collaborators complete their first maternity waiting home in Zambia

Maternity waiting homes — residences located near health facilities where pregnant women can stay before they go into labor — can make all the difference for pregnant women in rural Zambia, where the distance between home and a health facility can be a matter of life and death.

two men working on a brick house
nurse caring for a pregnant woman

2017

MSD for Mothers teams up with stakeholders across India to launch Manyata

MSD for Mothers, Jhpiego India and the Federation of Obstetric and Gynecological Societies of India partnered to launch Manyata – an ambitious agenda to improve quality of maternity and newborn care services in private facilities by training doctors, nursing and administrative staff on essential clinical, facility and patient care protocols in India.

a nurse helping patients fill out paper work

MSD for Mothers commits $10 million and business expertise to the Global Financing Facility

In support of the UN Secretary-General’s Every Woman Every Child strategy to improve maternal and child health in low- and lower-middle-income countries, the goal is to prevent an estimated 3.8 million maternal deaths, 101 million child deaths and 21 million stillbirths by 2030. MSD is the first private sector investor and helped bring other private sector investors to the table.

female doctor working with nurse

MSD for Mothers launches the world’s first maternal and newborn health development bond with public and private sector collaborators

The Utkrisht Development Impact Bond leverages private investor capital to incentivize private maternity providers in Rajasthan, India to improve the quality of care they deliver. Interventions will reach up to 600,000 pregnant women with improved care during delivery and could lead up to 10,000 lives being saved over a five-year period. 

Female doctor on her rounds at hospital in India

2018

Ferring Pharmaceuticals and MSD announce completion of carbetocin clinical trial, the largest clinical trial ever conducted in postpartum hemorrhage

The trial of heat-stable carbetocin showed it to be as safe and effective as oxytocin in preventing postpartum hemorrhage, the largest direct cause of maternal death. The trial included nearly 30,000 women from 10 countries.

“This has the potential to change the paradigm in how we save more mothers from dying during childbirth,” said Dr. Julie L. Gerberding, MSD’s chief patient officer.

two pregnant women touching bellies

MSD announces new U.S. initiative — Safer Childbirth Cities

Through this initiative, MSD for Mothers will provide grants to help cities with poor maternal health outcomes develop and implement creative, multi-sector solutions to save women’s lives, improve maternal health and narrow racial disparities.

Woman kissing her child in home in Romania

MSD for Mothers publishes first research compendium to advance collective understanding of maternal mortality

The research compendium, Evidence for Impact, collates actionable and real-time evidence about what works and what doesn’t to expand knowledge that will help encourage greater investment in women’s health. MSD for Mothers publishes a second compendium in 2020.
Mother holding baby alongside two other young children - in Romania

2019

MSD for Mothers has now reached 10 million women worldwide through its programs

happy couple with their baby

The MOMs (Maternal Outcomes Matters) Initiative launched

A partnership between MSD for Mothers, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, Credit Suisse and USAID to stimulate, advance and scale innovations that contribute to a healthy pregnancy and safe childbirth. It will invest $50M in local businesses that are working to improve maternal health in regions of the world where high rates of women are dying from pregnancy and childbirth. (Photo credit: LifeBank)

Pregnant belly on left with text on right that says "Hear her concerns"

2020

MSD for Mothers provides funding to help support the CDC’s new maternal health communication campaign, Hear Her

Hear Her brings attention to maternal mortality and provides support to pregnant and postpartum women to speak up when something doesn’t feel right.

woman nurse taking a pregnant woman's blood pressure

MSD commits $3M to address maternal health needs during COVID-19 pandemic

2021

MSD announces fifth round of global grants to tackle maternal mortality and promote health equity worldwide

MSD for Mothers supports the corporate grant program which enables MSD offices around the world to aid nongovernmental organizations that are improving maternal health. The program responds to local women’s needs, focusing on how resources can increase health equity in maternity care and support.

MSD announces additional $150M investment through 2025 to help end maternal mortality inequities, building on the $500M commitment made in 2011

This investment comes at a pivotal time for the global health community as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to stretch health systems, disrupting networks of care that support healthy pregnancies and safe childbirth.

Pregnant woman and her mother in hospital in India

2022

pregnant woman sitting on a bed

MSD for Mothers has now reached more than 18 million women worldwide through its programs.

MSD for Mothers celebrates 10 years and counting