Hajiya A'ishatu lives in the outskirts of Tudun-Wada city in Nigeria¡¯s Gombe State. She runs a shop out of her home selling cold drinks and other merchandise. Her older children often help with the business while her younger ones are still in school. She remembers when she gave birth to them at the Tudun Wada Primary Health Care Facility.
¡°I had all my children in this facility,¡± she says. My family is grateful for everything the doctors and nurses did for us here. They supported me throughout my deliveries and took good care of my babies. I am fortunate to see my children growing healthy and thriving. As a parent, you want the best for them.¡±
Hajiya¡¯s story speaks to a broader national effort over the past few years to improve maternal and child health services across Nigeria, particularly in underserved communities. Nigeria¡¯s levels of maternal and child mortality are among the highest in the world, with maternal mortality representing 20% of the global burden.
Through the establishment of a Basic Health Care Provision Fund the government was able to channel more resources to primary health care across the country. Financing and technical assistance from the Global Financing Facility for Women, Children and Adolescents (GFF), helped pilot this program in three states, and mobilized government resources to expand it nationwide. The efforts helped to strengthen about 900 primary health care facilities with critical infrastructure like maternity wards, medicines and skilled health workers. Deliveries, pregnancy medications and other services were provided for free, and some facilities even covered transportation expenses for midwives to reach isolated communities.
At the same time, the GFF and the World Bank supported the Nigeria State Health Investment Project to reach communities in the Northeastern region of Nigeria which has been grappling with conflict and weakened health systems, leaving many without health care. As a result, from 2014 and 2020, before the COVID-19 pandemic, safe deliveries jumped from 22% to 68% and the number of children immunized each year tripled to reach 1 million.