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A lifeline for mothers-to-be on Yemen’s west coast

26 Feb 25 | 05 Mar 25

A lifeline for mothers-to-be on Yemen’s west coast

Randa takes a selfie in front of the Red Sea with the other midwives of the MSF maternity in the Mocha General Hospital. Caption
Randa takes a selfie in front of the Red Sea with the other midwives of the MSF maternity in the Mocha General Hospital.

In Yemen's west coast region, pregnant women often need to make long journeys on bad roads to access the healthcare they need. MSF's maternity ward in Mocha General Hospital is the only 24/7 service in the area, providing specialist care for the most complicated pregnancies. 

Background: MSF in Mocha

MSF has been working in Mocha city since 2018, first as a surgical project for war-wounded. In 2019, MSF started providing care for pregnant women with complicated deliveries, becoming the region's first line post for live-saving obstetric services.

Since the move to the hospital in July 2024, MSF teams have helped 1616 women to safely deliver.

“I told my husband I would not survive childbirth again, because I have diabetes,” shares Negah Abdallah Ali, who has just delivered her healthy baby, Ashraf, at the Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) maternity ward at the Mocha General Hospital.

Here on Yemen’s west coast, it’s a sunny Monday afternoon. Outside, the air is a heavy 35 degrees Celsius, but inside the post-delivery room, Negah and the other mothers can feel a soothing breeze from the air-conditioning. Peering out of the window, patients can see the swelling rhythm of the Red Sea just beyond the hospital.

On top of having diabetes, Negah, who is 35 years old, has hypertension. Both conditions increase the risks associated with pregnancy and delivery. Negah is one of the thousands of women who come to MSF’s maternity services during their pregnancy.

Baby boy Ashraf, Negah’s son, is a minute old. In front of the students, Ann Van Haver, MSF midwife activity manager, applies postnatal checks. Caption
Baby boy Ashraf, Negah’s son, is a minute old. In front of the students, Ann Van Haver, MSF midwife activity manager, applies postnatal checks.

A healthcare desert

As in most countries affected by conflict, Yemen has a collapsed healthcare system. This leaves women and children particularly vulnerable to health complications. In Mocha, one of the ways this manifests is the unavailability of services for pregnant women.

“We are the only 24/7 maternity and paediatric wards in the entire west coast area, which covers a little more than half a million people,” says Ann Van Haver, MSF midwife activity manager.

In July 2024, MSF integrated our maternity services into Mocha General Hospital. This allowed us to expand the services we could offer, including by opening the new comprehensive obstetric and neonatal care ward.

Today, the maternity ward has 28 beds for delivery and post-delivery, including beds for neonatal and intensive care. Before this move, MSF was providing maternal care out of a field hospital that was set up in Mocha in 2022.

At MSF's out-patient department in Batil refugee camp Gandhi Pant, a nurse, escorts a patient with a possible appendicitis to a waiting ambulance. 

Batil is one of three camps in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State sheltering at least 113,000 refugees who have crossed the border from Blue Nile state to escape fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the SPLM-North armed group. Refugees arrive at the camp with harrowing stories of being bombed out of their homes, or having their villages burned. The camps into which they have poured are on a vast floodplain, leaving many tents flooded and refugees vulnerable to disease. Mortality rates in Batil camp are at emergency levels, malnutrition rates are more than five times above emergency thresholds, and diarrhea and malarial cases are rising.

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Complications and risks

Yemen’s west coast is a rural area with frontlines to the north and east. Women with high-risk or complicated pregnancies sometimes make a three-hour drive to reach the hospital in Mocha. An expected 15 percent of the deliveries will have complications, which, if not treated urgently, could be fatal.

These complications are easily preventable, but without consistent and accessible antenatal and postnatal care pregnancy becomes more dangerous.

The healthcare centres in the region are ill-equipped, untrained, and scarce to begin with. So, women often have to travel long distances on bad roads.

There are many factors working against a woman’s ability to reach a hospital on the west coast: continued displacement from the conflict, many checkpoints along the roads, dire economic conditions, and the need to get formal consent from a male family member for any medical act, including a caesarean section.

This leaves expectant mothers with little choice but to deliver in unsafe places, risking their and their baby’s life.

Dr Faiza performs a caesarean section on Asmaa Caption
Dr Faiza performs a caesarean section on Asmaa
Midwifery students getting a tour in the operational theatre during their observation internship with the Mocha midwifery school. Caption
Midwifery students getting a tour in the operational theatre during their observation internship with the Mocha midwifery school.

“There are so many challenges for mothers in Yemen, and most of them are linked to the war making access to the few left health centres too complicated,” says Altaf Al Wahidi, a 28-year-old midwife at the MSF maternity.

“That’s why the location of this maternity is so crucial, we cover a large area of the west coast.”

Around 1,300 women are expected to give birth each month in the west coast region. Ann Van Haver insists that a closer-to-home first line of care should be available.

“Around 250 are delivering with us now,” says Van Haver. “So, there are a thousand other deliveries every month somewhere else. And today, this is not in health facilities. And because of that, we see a lot more complications requiring invasive treatments.”

Two day-old baby boy born at the maternity ward at 33 weeks. Caption
Two day-old baby boy born at the maternity ward at 33 weeks.

Dignity and solidarity

In the post-delivery room, Negah is visited by the health educator, Bashira Seqek, who gives her information about paracetamol toxicity, the benefits of breastfeeding, and family planning. Meanwhile, in the corridor, her husband Ali Abdallah Ali holds their one-day-old son with pride in his eyes.

“Since the maternity opened here in Mocha, everything is available, and I am grateful for that,” says Ali. “I feel 100 percent confident about the services provided. In my village, we all know we have to come here for matters related to maternal care.”

Behind the door, where non-medical male staff aren’t allowed, the maternity ward is a woman’s world of dignity and solidarity.

Since moving our services to Mocha General Hospital, more than 1,600 women have safely delivered in our ward.

MSF and the humanitarian crisis in Yemen

Yemen is in the middle of a complex humanitarian crisis driven by a brutal civil war.

The crisis is driven by both armed conflict and the consequent deterioration in the economy, which has had a severe impact on people’s health, living conditions and access to basic services.

More than 4.5 million people have been displaced since the war started in 2015. With an estimated 21 million currently in need of humanitarian assistance, our activities in Yemen are among our most extensive worldwide.