She Made It
to the Clinic— 
but Something Was Missing

One mother did everything right. But when she woke up, everything had changed—and it didn’t have to happen.

Anore made it to the clinic on time.

 

She knew her pregnancy was high-risk, and she did everything a mother could to get help.

 

Yet when she woke up, she got the worst news a mother can hear. There was no cry when her baby was delivered.

I asked myself the same question over and over: Could this have been prevented?

Sarah Bowling
FOUNDER, SAVING MOSES
Writing from South Sudan

I was there that day in South Sudan.

We’d been walking through what the community calls a hospital—though to us it feels more like a small clinic—when we stepped into the birthing room during Anore’s recovery from a C-section.

It’s a kind of silence you don’t ever forget.

I asked myself the same question over and over: Could this have been prevented?

We asked what supplies the clinic had. No advanced equipment. Nothing complicated. Just the basics. They found gloves. A plastic sheet. Some string.

But even something as simple as a clean razor blade wasn’t there.

This is what childbirth can look like in South Sudan...

  • Distance that delays assistance.
  • Instability that disrupts care.
  • Clinics doing the best they can with limited resources.

But in moments like this, what’s available changes everything.

This is exactly why BirthAid exists.

  • To step into moments like this before they become loss.
  • To train local birth attendants to recognize danger earlier.
  • To provide simple, lifesaving tools for the people already there.
  • To make sure that when a mother arrives, the room is ready.

Because the difference between life and loss is often not complicated.
It’s simply having the right care at the right moment.

PO Box 228, Sterling, KS 67579-0228 | 1-888-985-2000 | info@savingmoses.org

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