Amnesty International believes “Maternal Health is a Human Right,” so it’s holding a Maternal Health Town Hall meeting in San Francisco’s Main Public Library at 100 Larkin in Civic Center from 5:30 – 7:30 PM on Wednesday, April 14th, 2010.
Deets below.
Our SFPL sez: “Vita sine litteris mors est.” (Find this shield somewhere in the Richmond District.)
(That means either, “Give me learning, sir, and you may keep your black bread” or “Give a hoot, read a book.”)
All right, the commercial for the library is over. Here are the deets for the town hall. (FYI, show up early and consider RSVP-ing if you want a seat.)
Amnesty International Hosts April Town Hall Forums in San Francisco (April 14), Detroit and New York City on Crisis of Maternal Health in U.S. and Worldwide. International and Local Speakers to Focus on Campaign to Reduce Preventable Deaths of Women and Mothers
NEW YORK, April 7 — Amnesty International will host three special public town hall forums with its leaders from around the world and local partner organizations in San Francisco (April 14), Detroit (April 17) and New York City (April 19) to spotlight a new campaign to reduce preventable maternal deaths in the United States and worldwide. Urging the public to learn the truth about the world’s “missing mothers,” Amnesty International will host discussions with local maternal health experts and its national leaders from the United States, Burkina Faso, Peru, and Sierra Leone — countries where the human rights organization has launched campaigns to prevent unacceptably high rates of maternal deaths.
Following the recent release of its report, Deadly Delivery: The Maternal Health Care Crisis in the U.S.A., Amnesty International is asking the U.S. government to establish a national Office of Maternal Health to improve pregnancy and childbirth outcomes. The United States spends more than any other country on health care and more on maternal health than any other type of hospital care. Despite this, the United States ranks behind 40 other countries in the rate of maternal deaths, with 2 to 3 women dying every day and 34,000 pregnant women every year suffering “near misses” — where severe complications nearly cause death.
More deets after the jump.








