CategoriesWACI Health News

World Pre-eclampsia Day: Centering Lived Experiences to Shape Maternal Health Solutions

World Pre-eclampsia Day: Centering Lived Experiences to Shape Maternal Health Solutions

This World Pre-eclampsia Day (22 May), we reflect not only on the urgent need to prevent maternal deaths, but also on the importance of listening to the women and communities most affected by them.

Every year, nearly 76,000 women and more than 500,000 babies lose their lives to pre-eclampsia and other hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. Despite being preventable and treatable, pre-eclampsia remains one of the leading causes of maternal and newborn illness and death, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

Many of the tools needed to diagnose and manage pre-eclampsia already exist. Yet for many women, access remains shaped by distance, cost, shortages, inconsistent care, and limited awareness.

Research shows that integrating the lived experiences of women and affected communities directly shapes better maternal health solutions. Building on this understanding, WACI Health, through our role in the Unitaid-funded SUPREME Secure project, recently partnered with Action on Preeclampsia Ghana (APEC Ghana), Zuri Nzilani Foundation, and Thrive Beyond Preeclampsia Foundation to deliver Focus Group Discussions in Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania. 

These discussions brought together more than 60 participants across the three countries, including pregnant women, survivors of pre-eclampsia, community health workers, community leaders, and other community representatives, ensuring a diverse range of perspectives and lived experiences.

The aim was to better understand how women experience screening, diagnosis, treatment, and care in their everyday realities, and what this means for the delivery of lifesaving maternal health tools.

Pregnant women and survivors of pre-eclampsia participating in the Focus Group Discussions in Kenya.
Pregnant women and survivors of pre-eclampsia participating in the Focus Group Discussions in Kenya. Source: Zuri Nzilani Foundation

“Women often arrive only after symptoms become severe”

Across Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania, participants described how pre-eclampsia is frequently detected late, often only after symptoms such as swelling, headaches, dizziness, or blurred vision become severe.

Several women described diagnosis as largely reactive rather than preventive, with many only receiving care once complications had already developed.

Community health workers also highlighted the challenges they face: Many explained that they often rely on visual observation alone, because they lack portable diagnostic tools and sufficient equipment needed to support early screenings.

Distance, cost, and tools that are not always fit for purpose

Participants repeatedly highlighted transport costs, long waiting times, and equipment shortages as major barriers to timely care.

Women and community health workers described shortages of blood pressure machines at clinics and district hospitals, with some facilities reportedly operating with only one or two devices for large numbers of patients. Beyond this, participants also raised concerns about whether existing tools are truly designed for the realities of the communities and health systems where they are being used.

In Kenya, women described experiences with poorly maintained or unreliable blood pressure machines, including malfunctioning battery-operated devices and cuff sizes that were not always suitable for all body types. These concerns undermined confidence in screening results and contributed to delayed diagnoses.

Community health workers also highlighted the hidden costs of maintaining diagnostic equipment. Some reported personally purchasing batteries or covering minor repair costs to keep blood pressure devices functioning during household visits. For frontline workers already operating with limited resources, this creates an additional burden and can interrupt consistent screenings at community level.

Community representatives on pre-eclampsia in Tanzania
Community health workers and community representatives following the Focus Group Discussions in Tanzania. Source: Thrive Beyond Preeclampsia Foundation

Trust, communication, and community-based care matter

The discussions also revealed how trust, information, and community-based support shape women’s experiences of care during pregnancy.

Women described anxiety about taking medication during pregnancy, particularly when they were not given enough information about why medicines had been prescribed or whether they were safe for their babies. Others spoke about stopping treatment because of side effects or uncertainty about the importance of continuing medication. These experiences reinforced how critical respectful communication, counselling, and trusted support systems are in maternal health care.

Across all three countries, community health workers emerged as some of the most trusted actors for maternal health care because they are accessible, familiar, and embedded within their communities. However, community health workers themselves reported feeling under-equipped to meet the scale of need. 

Participants called for stronger investment in community-based screening, more diagnostic devices, and continuous training for frontline health workers.

Listening to lived experience must shape maternal health solutions

One message came through clearly across the discussions: no woman wants to risk her life or that of her baby, but many still face barriers that make timely care difficult to access.

The Focus Group Discussions reinforced the important lesson that maternal health solutions must be shaped not only by clinical evidence, but also by lived experience. By listening to women and affected communities, we can help ensure that lifesaving diagnostics and treatments are accessible, trusted, affordable, and responsive to the realities women face every day.

The findings from the discussions will play a critical role in informing the SUPREME Secure project’s initial market assessment of maternal health products and technologies. Throughout the SUPREME Secure project, WACI Health will be working alongside partners to support further community and civil society engagement activities, including the establishment of Community Advisory Boards, ensuring that future strategies and interventions are grounded in real community needs and experiences.

This World Pre-eclampsia Day, WACI Health reaffirms our commitment to amplifying community voices and ensuring that women are active partners in shaping maternal health solutions. 

Join us in calling for stronger investments in improving access to quality maternal and newborn health products, sustained support for frontline workers and community-based maternal health, and policies, interventions, and tools shaped by the women and communities most affected. 

No one should die from a condition we know how to prevent and treat.

Pregnant women and survivors of pre-eclampsia at FGD in Ghana
Pregnant women and survivors of pre-eclampsia participating in the Focus Group Discussions in Ghana. Source: Action on Preeclampsia Ghana


WACI Health extends immense thanks to Koiwah Koi-Larbi (APEC Ghana), Ashley Muteti (Zuri Nzilani Foundation, Kenya), and Catherine Kakolo Mongella (Thrive Beyond Preeclampsia Foundation, Tanzania) for their collaboration and facilitation of the Focus Group Discussions. 

CategoriesWACI Health News

Centering Community Voices in Maternal Health: SUPREME Secure CCSE Update

As part of the SUPREME Secure consortium, WACI Health is sharing updates from its Communities and Civil Society Engagement (CCSE) workstream. This partnership is helping ensure that the people most affected by pre-eclampsia and maternal anaemia actively shape how lifesaving diagnostics and treatments are developed, introduced, and delivered.

This update covers activities from January to March 2026, including focus group discussions with over 60 participants across Kenya, Tanzania, and Ghana; a pre-IMNHC webinar reaching 150+ participants; contributions to country co-creation workshops; and the launch of a small grants call to support community-led advocacy.

Read the full update below.

CategoriesWACI Health News

No Woman Should Die While Giving Life: A Reflection on Pre-Eclampsia and Maternal Health


No Woman Should Die While Giving Life: A Reflection on Pre-Eclampsia and Maternal Health

By Brenda Bonareri, Policy and Advocacy Officer, WACI Health


“We believe that no woman should die while giving life, and every birth should have positive outcomes for both mother and newborn. They should survive because maternal and neonatal complications are preventable.”
– Joyce Ng’anga, WACI Health

Some events stay with you long after the final speaker signs off. Our recent webinar on pre-eclampsia and women’s voices was one of them.

“Saving Lives of Mothers and Newborns – Women’s Voices on Pre-Eclampsia: A Conversation to Drive Change Ahead of IMNHC 2026”

Taking place in the lead up to global leaders and experts gathering at the International Maternal Newborn Health Conference (IMNHC) 2026, the discussion brought together SUPREME project partners, civil society, and communities directly impacted by pre-eclampsia and placed women’s lived experiences at the center.

For me, the event was a powerful reminder that maternal mortality and neonatal complications are not just statistics but lived realities for thousands of women and families across Kenya and Africa.

I was particularly moved by the pre-eclampsia diaries video produced by Action on Preeclampsia Ghana (APEC Ghana), which gave voice to powerful testimonies from four women who have faced this life-threatening condition.

“I couldn’t believe that at 32 weeks I could just lose my baby, whereas I could feel the baby moving that morning. I was in denial. I still have a hard time talking about it.”
– Hannah Yebuah-Amo, a customer service executive and pre-eclampsia survivor.

From the discussion, the critical truth that women are often not given timely, actionable information during antenatal care was underscored. As Catherine Kakolo Mongella of Thrive Beyond Pre-eclampsia Foundation (TPEF) in Tanzania noted, many women only receive crucial information when complications have already developed. This gap in early awareness continues to cost lives.

“As a mother, once you are pregnant, you are focused on the end game which is holding the child in your hands. If you are told to stop doing something, you will be keen.”
– Catherine Kakolo Mongella, TPEF

Similarly, Ashley Muteti of Zuri Nzilani Foundation in Kenya highlighted how health systems fail women who have experienced loss. Too often, they are not supported with the information or care needed to safely navigate future pregnancies. She spoke about the need to champion and embrace pre-conception care, and equip these women with information on when they need to seek care. There is also a need for expanding support groups and leveraging community health volunteers as essential steps to bridge this gap.

Reflecting on these realities, Koiwah Koi-Larbi of APEC Ghana emphasized that these stories are a powerful reminder of the lived reality for many women and a call to do better. The next time we see such stories, she noted, they should reflect progress, particularly in improving timely access to care.

“Care—no matter how quality it is—if not given on time, it is useless.”
– Koiwah Koi-Larbi, APEC Ghana

My key takeaway from the webinar was about the persistent systemic gaps: delayed diagnosis, limited access to quality diagnostics, late or inadequate care, and low awareness of pre-eclampsia symptoms at the community level. These are not new challenges but they remain dangerously unaddressed for far too many women.

The webinar featured the newly-launched Unitaid SUPREME project, which brings together leading partners, including Clinton Health Access Initiative (for the SECURE component) and Amref Health Africa (for the LIFELINES component), to scale up access to interventions for the timely detection and treatment of pre-eclampsia and anaemia in pregnant women.

WACI Health is part of the SUPREME SECURE project where we will contribute to ensuring that the introduction and scaling of diagnostics, treatments, and tools reflect the voices of the communities and reach women who need them most—particularly those often left behind. As an organization committed to advancing health equity across Africa, we continue to champion the role of civil society and community accountability in shaping how health solutions are designed, delivered, and measured.

We cannot discuss ending preventable maternal and neonatal deaths without centering the voices of those most affected!