HAITI-HEALTH-MSF supports the reopening of a major maternity hospital

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) says it is supporting the reopening of a major maternity hospital in the capital, Port au Prince, which it says is providing care for mothers and pregnant women and where almost 60 per cent of births take place without medical care.

MSF said that in the French-speaking Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country, maternal and infant mortality rates remain among the highest in the Caribbean and Latin America, and access to health care has become severely limited amid a broader crisis of violence and insecurity.

The MSF said that it is supporting the reopening of the Isaïe Jeanty Maternity Hospital, one of the largest in the country, which had closed during a wave of violence in early 2024.

In partnership with the Ministry of Public Health and Population, MSF co-manages the facility to ensure the provision of quality sexual and reproductive health care services, addressing urgent and largely unmet needs.

MSF said that as violence and insecurity increased between February 2022 and April 2025, the proportion of maternal deaths in hospitals rose from 250 to 350 per 100,000 live births, while home deliveries became increasingly common.

It said currently, nearly 60 per cent of births in Port-au-Prince take place without medical care, increasing the risk of complications such as hemorrhage, infections, and hypertension, one of the leading causes of maternal mortality. Far too many women and pregnant adolescents die due to lack of medical care.

‘Because of the growing insecurity, several health facilities have shut down, reducing the availability of sexual and reproductive health care,’ explains Diana Manilla Arroyo, MSF head of mission in Haiti.

‘Every woman deserves a safe place to give birth, yet this basic right is too often denied. This is why reopening Isaïe Jeanty Maternity Hospital, in an especially isolated area such as Cité Soleil, is absolutely crucial,’ she added.

MSF said that the goal is to strengthen the quality of sexual and reproductive health care in an area where medical services remain extremely limited and where the population is regularly exposed to clashes between armed groups and police forces.

It said that the maternity hospital also serves as an essential training ground for the next generation of obstetric health care professionals. Its proper functioning strengthens the capacity of the health system in Port-au-Prince and contributes to the future of maternal and reproductive health across the country.

Since the beginning of the year, the facility’s activity has steadily increased. The number of prenatal consultations rose from 56 in January to 547 in July, while deliveries increased from 10 in April to 134 in August.

‘Haiti is trapped in a devastating cycle of sexual violence, unwanted pregnancies, and high-risk pregnancies, undermining the most fundamental reproductive health decisions, to choose if, when, and with whom to have a child,’ adds Manilla Arroyo.

‘With one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the region and a collapsing health system, access to safe care remains out of reach for many. Every woman and girl should have the right to live free from violence and to have control over her body, health, and future,’ she adds.

Meanwhile, MSF said that ongoing violence in the capital has forced it to permanently close its Port-au-Prince emergency care center, which had been a key lifeline in the city.

The emergency center had originally opened in the Port-au-Prince neighborhood of Martissant in 2006, but was forced to move to Turgeau in 2021 for security reasons. From 2021 to March 2025, the Turgeau emergency center treated more than 100,000 patients.

From January to June, more than 3,100 people were reported killed across Haiti and an additional 1,100 reported injured, according to the United Nations.

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