In: Economics
Traditional birth attendants are the lay midwives who provide childbirth ser services in places where modern medical services are not available. At present also, such practices are widely available in underdeveloped places of Africa and Asia. Such traditional birth attendants are neither trained in modern medical education nor do they have medical devices and equipment. They also hardly have any formal education in healthcare services or any certifications. Rather they rely on traditional knowledge and practices of childbirth learned from self-knowledge or from another such lay midwives. Therefore, such practices often prove to be fatal for the newborn or for both. Since they do not have sophisticated knowledge or training about childbirth, many infants die in the process and add to the child mortality rate. This is why in countries like Uganda, Honduras, Malawi, etc. where traditional birth attendants generally attend childbirth have a high infant mortality rate.